The Palgrave Handbook of Family Firm Internationalization 3030667367, 9783030667368

Family Firms (FFs) form the majority of all firms around the world and they account for an enormous percentage of the em

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Table of contents :
The Palgrave Handbook of Family Firm Internationalization
Foreword 1: Breaking New Ground
Ownership and Governance
Goals: Economic and Non-economic Goals, and Socioemotional Wealth
Family Social Capital Relationships and Network Ties
Institutions
Concluding Remarks
References
Foreword 2: Reflections on the Family Firm Internationalization Literature
Introduction
What Features of Family firm Governance Are Likely to Impact Its Internationalization?
How to Measure Internationalization
Traditional Theories of Family Firm Internationalization
Niche Business Models and Family Firm Internationalization
Implications for the Study of Family Firm Internationalization
References
Foreword 3
References
Foreword 4
Preface
References
Acknowledgements
Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
Notes on Contributors
Part I: Family Firm-Specific Views and Internationalization
1: Internationalization Decisions in Family Firms: The Impact of Bifurcation Bias
Introduction
Internalization Theory and the Family Firm
Bifurcation Bias: An Overview
Bifurcation Bias and International Governance Decisions
Bifurcation Bias and Host Country Location Selection
Bifurcation Bias and Operating Mode Selection
The Magnitude and Impact of Bifurcation Bias: Cultural Factors
Personal Values and Bifurcation Bias
Societal Values and Bifurcation Bias
SEW Pursuit and Family Firm Internationalization
SEW Versus Bifurcation Bias
Facilitative Role of SEW in Unbiased Firms: The Imperative of Recombination
Economizing on Bifurcation Bias
General Economizing Strategies
Timing and Scale of Bifurcation Bias Economizing
Conclusion
References
2: Internationalisation and Family Involvement: A Stewardship Approach in the Hotel Industry
Introduction
Literature Review
Definition and Heterogeneity of FFs
Agency Theory, Socioemotional Wealth Theory and Stewardship Theory
FF Internationalisation
Foreign Entry Modes of FFs
Methodology
Dependent Variables
Independent Variables
Control Variables
Results
Discussion
Limitations and Future Research
Conclusions
References
3: Socioemotional Wealth and Networking in the Internationalisation of Family SMEs
Introduction
Socioemotional Wealth and Networking in Family Firm Internationalisation
Data and Methods
Data Collection and Sample Selection
Dependent Variables
Independent Variables
Control Variables
Correlations
Common Method Bias
Results
Discussion
Conclusions
References
4: An Integrative Framework of Family Firms and Foreign Entry Strategies
Introduction
Theoretical Framework
Family Firms
Entry Modes: An Overview
Entry Mode and Family Firms: The Theoretical Approaches
Future Research and Conclusions
References
Part II: Internationalization Process of Family Firms
5: Internationalization of Family Firms as a Discontinuous Process: The Role of Behavioral Theory
Introduction
Theoretical Background
Family Firms and Internationalization
Internationalization as a Discontinuous Process
Internationalization of Family Firms and the Behavioral Theory of the Firm
Theories Used in Research on Family Firms’ Internationalization
The Behavioral Theory of the Firm and Family Firms’ Internationalization
Future Research Directions on Family Firms’ De-internationalization and Re-internationalization
Goals and Quasi Resolution of Goal Conflict
Uncertainty Avoidance
Problemistic Search
Learning
Conclusions
References
6: One Family Firm, Four Families: Developing Management Models of a Family Values-Based MNC
Introduction
Values-Based Management of a Family MNC
Family MNCs as Internationally Operating Network Organisations
Values-Based Management Model of a Family MNC: A Practice Approach
Research Methodology
Research Strategy
Data Collection and Analysis
Management Models in a Family MNC in the Forest Machine Industry
Historically Developing Values-Base of the Family Firm’s Operations
Localised Management Models from the Values of Headquarters to the Subsidiaries
Discussion
References
7: The “Unwritten Will” in Interpersonal Network Ties: Founder Legacy and International Networking of Family Firms in History
Introduction
Theoretical Framework
Interpersonal Networks in Family Firm Internationalization
Founders and Their Interpersonal Ties in Identity-Based and Calculative Networks
Legacy: From Founders to Family Firms
Research Design
Findings
Emergence of the Interpersonal Identity-Based and Calculative Ties in the Founder and Successor Generations
Case Ahlström
Case Serlachius
Manifestation of the Founders’ “International Networking Legacy” in the Successors’ Approach
Concluding Discussion
References
Part III: Networks in Family Firm Internationalization
8: Entry Nodes in Foreign Market Entry and Post-Entry Operations of Family-Managed Firms
Introduction
Theoretical Background
FF Internationalisation Through a Network Lens
Entry Nodes Versus Entry Modes
The SEW Perspective
Methodology
The Qualitative Case Study Approach
Case Study Selection
Data Collection
Data Analysis
Findings
The Entry Nodes of Family-Managed SMEs (First Entry to International Markets)
The Entry Nodes of Family-Managed SMEs (Post-Entry to International Markets)
Discussion and Conclusions
References
9: How Do Family Firms Orchestrate Their Global Value Chain?
Introduction
GVC and the Global Factory Model
Family Firm Distinctive Characteristics: Non-financial Goals and Family Social Capital
Family Firm Orchestration of the GVC: Design and Governance
Discussion
Limitations and Future Research Directions
References
10: Coexistence of Economic and Noneconomic Goals in Building Foreign Partner Relationships: Evidence from Small Finnish Family Firms
Introduction
Theoretical Background
International Networking of Small FFs
Socioemotional Wealth as a Liability and a Capability in Strong Network Relationships
Methodology
Findings
SEW Profiles
Foreign Partner Relationship (FPR)-Building
Discussion
Conclusions
Appendix: Example Case Firms with High, Moderate or Low SEW Profile
References
11: Networking from Home to Abroad: The Internationalization of The Iberostar Group
Introduction
Theoretical Framework: Networks in the Internationalization of Family Firms
When Context Matters: Spain in the Second Half of the Twentieth Century
Our Case Study: Iberostar Group, the History of a Long-Lasting Family Firm
Research Method
Qualitative Case Study Research
Data Collection
Data Analysis
From Home to Abroad: A Longitudinal Process of Networking
The Internationalization of the Inbound Business
The Internationalization of the Outbound Business: From Iberojet to Sunworld
The Internationalization of the Hotel Business
Discussion and Conclusions
References
12: Social Capital and Values in the Internationalization of Family Firms: A Multi-Country Study
Introduction
Theoretical Background
Values and Bifurcation Bias
Family Structures
Methodology
Data Collection and Analysis
Case Profiles at the Time of the Interviews
FIN
FRA
TAI
Findings
Case FIN
Case FRA
Case TAI
Cross-Case Analysis
Discussion and Conclusions
References
Part IV: Family Firm Internationalization from Emerging Markets
13: The Network Dynamics During Internationalization of a Family Firm: The Case of a New Venture from Colombia
Introduction
Family Firm Internationalization from a Network Perspective
Methodology
Findings: Focused Case Narrative
Gaining Professional Competencies and International Work Experience
Setting up the Business
Gaining Experience Locally with Development Technology
Becoming Part of the Local Ecosystem
Becoming an Importer/Re-seller of Technology and Know-How
Becoming a Video Game Producer
Creating Competencies for the Development and Sales of Globally Competitive Mobile Video Games in Cooperation with Alliance Partner
Building a Local Support Infrastructure
Creating a Local Ecosystem for Video Game Entrepreneurship
Engaging with the Global Community of Mobile Video Game Development
Tying International Game Experts to Product and Business Development
Experimenting with New Product and Cooperation Strategies
Seeing the World Through Different Eyes
Synthesis of Findings
Discussion
The Networking Profile of the Family Member and the Non-family Member
Shaping the Evolution of the Firm’s International Network
Dealing with the Mixed Gamble During Internationalization
Overcoming the Locational Disadvantage
Conclusions
References
14: Internationalisation of a Migrant Family Firm and Contextual Uncertainty: The Role of Ethnic Social Networks
Introduction
Theoretical Framework
Migrant Families in Businesses
Networks and Social Capital
Benefits and Disadvantages of Ethnic Networks
Uncertain Contexts, Risk and Instability
Context
Nicaragua and German Families in Business
The Coffee Industry
Methodology
The Khül Family and the Selva Negra Estate
Data Analysis
Findings
Ethnic Identity and Networks as Starting Points
Relevance of Ethnic Relational Resources for Succeeding Generations
The Relevance of a Mixed Network for Future International Purposes
Discussion
Limitations and Further Research
References
15: Internationalization of Small Indian Family-Firms: An Emergent Theory
Introduction
Review and Synthesis of Literature
Internationalization Literature in Perspective: Three-Circle Framework
Internationalization of Small Family-Firms (FFs)
Emerging Economy Firms and Internationalization
Internationalization of Small Indian FFs: The Paradox of Environmental Context
Gap in Research
Integrated Model of Emerging Economy Small Family-Firm Internationalization
The Ability to Internationalize
Willingness to Internationalize
Research Methods
Findings and Empirical Analysis
Internationalization Process
Decision to Internationalize and Internationalization Pathways
Internationalization Strategies
Sustainability of Internationalization
Family-Specific Factors Affecting Internationalization
Entrepreneurial Orientation of the Key Influencer
Family Socio-Emotional Wealth (SEW)
Bifurcation Bias
Network Relations and Ties
Internal Resources and Capabilities
Discussion
Alternative Typology for Small FF Internationalization
Limitations and Opportunities for Future Research
References
16: Family Firms’ Internationalization: The Importance of Home Country Institutions
Introduction
Institutional Theory and Internationalization of Family Businesses
Institutional Isomorphism and Family Firms’ Internationalization
Coercive Pressure and Family Firms
Mimetic Isomorphism and Family Firms
Normative Pressure and Family Firms
Home Country Institutions on Family Firms’ Internationalization
Laws and Regulations Facilitating Business Transfer
Associations of Family Businesses
Protection of Minority Shareholders
Generalized Trust Toward Family Businesses
Taxation of Reinvested Profits
Social Networks
Culture
Discussion and Conclusions
Future Research
References
17: Internationalization Process of Developing-Country Family SMEs: The Case of Solanos Hermanos S.A. of Guatemala
Introduction
Theoretical Underpinning
Methodological Approach
Setting
Firm
Results
Descriptive Information
Structural Resources
Experiential Resources
Discussion and Conclusions
References
Index
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The Palgrave Handbook of Family Firm Internationalization Edited by  Tanja Leppäaho · Sarah Jack

The Palgrave Handbook of Family Firm Internationalization

Tanja Leppäaho  •  Sarah Jack Editors

The Palgrave Handbook of Family Firm Internationalization

Editors Tanja Leppäaho LUT University Lappeenranta, Finland

Sarah Jack House of Innovation, Stockholm School of Economics, Stockholm, Sweden Lancaster University Management School, Lancaster, UK

ISBN 978-3-030-66736-8    ISBN 978-3-030-66737-5 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-66737-5 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2021 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is ­concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, r­ eproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. The publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, expressed or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or ­omissions that may have been made. The publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Cover illustration: Zoonar GmbH / Alamy Stock Photo This Palgrave Macmillan imprint is published by the registered company Springer Nature Switzerland AG. The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland

To our family members To family entrepreneurs all around the world

Foreword 1: Breaking New Ground

I was very excited when Tanja Leppäaho and Sarah Jack invited me to write this Foreword for this first-ever Handbook on Family Firm Internationalization. Family firm internationalization attracts growing scholarly interest, including critical reviews (Kontinen and Ojala, 2010; Pukall & Calabrò, 2014), state-­ of-­the-art statements (Metsola et  al., 2020), new theoretical developments within and beyond the traditional family business field (Arregle et al., 2019; Reuber, 2016; Verbeke et al., 2019), empirical analysis of internationalization theory (Cesinger et  al., 2016), and meta-analyses (Arregle et  al., 2017). However, cumulatively, we do not sufficiently understand family firm internationalization, its uniqueness and differences against non-family firms, heterogeneity among family firms themselves, or whether existing internationalization theories must change when considering the family firm (e.g. Arregle et  al., 2019; Cesinger et  al., 2016). This list is by no means exhaustive, and a plethora of questions remain unanswered. The decision for researchers then is what to prioritize for study to generate truly new insights. In many ways, this decision is one that this first-ever Palgrave Handbook on Family Firm Internationalization sets out to richly inform—a feat it certainly achieves! A general conclusion from studies of family firm internationalization to date is that “family matters” for internationalization (Arregle et  al., 2017). This is hardly surprising to most family firm scholars. However, further scrutiny reveals a general tendency toward ownership and governance, economic and non-economic goals, socioemotional wealth, family relationships and network ties, and institutions as essential considerations. The compilation of 17 chapters residing in this Handbook addresses individually or in combination these essential themes, and each gives rise to new considerations vital to vii

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Foreword 1: Breaking New Ground

spearheading novel research. I do not see this Handbook as a “how to” guide, but instead a “where to” guide that gives birth to exciting new questions for family firm internationalization research. It addresses these underlying themes, reveals potent theoretical considerations, and inspires new questions. I would like to share with the reader my observations and lessons.

Ownership and Governance Ownership and governance are two of the most widely studied features of family business (Suess, 2014; Hu & Hughes, 2020; Madison et al., 2016). Family firms differ from non-family firms owing to the unification, not separation, of ownership and control (Carney, 2005). While such an arrangement was expected to ameliorate traditional agency problem, giving rise to stewardship, dysfunction, conflict, nepotism, and asymmetric power can occur among family agents (Carney, 2005; Madison et  al., 2016; Schulze et  al., 2001) and affect family firm strategy (Scholes et al., 2020). The power of the family can come at the expense of non-family members and minority investors, for example. Internally directed governance mechanisms (such as the family status of the CEO or board chair, composition of the board of directors or management) can also solidify family power. In contrast, the general alignment of interests among family members can encourage stewardly behaviour, interest alignment, and protection of the firm and the family’s (good) name (Davis et al., 1997; Miller & Le Breton-Miller, 2006). Ultimately, governance in the family business literature to date is a problem posed by ownership and answered through agency or stewardship theories. What is interesting about the research at the interface of family business and international business is the emergence of new governance considerations in the form of resource use (and disposal) and dysfunctional behaviour. In this Handbook, Kano et al. (Chap. 1) build on the work of Verbeke et al. (2020) on a “bifurcation bias” among family firms. Defined as a tendency to separate assets and routines into heritage-based and commodity-based categories depending on family ownership and control, a bifurcation bias suggests that families create affect-based governance practices that may clash with boundedly rational economic consideration in guiding international strategy. Batas et al. (Chap. 12) extend this notion of bifurcation bias to suggest a relationship with family structure and institutional traditions concerning family (e.g. hierarchy) in religion and culture to understand their international networking behaviour. Rienda et al. (Chap. 2), however, adopt the classic perspective of governance to consider how family ownership, CEO, management, and generation affect the degree of internationalization.

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I see an opportunity to combine both perspectives to understand the configuration of a family firm’s governance and decisions to do with its international strategy (and especially the composition of entry modes, degree of internationalization, location, etc.). My one concern, however, mirrors the thoughts of Scholes et  al. (2020): while capable of directing behaviour (Madison et al., 2016), governance is still long-linked to family firm (international) strategy and may be subject to contingencies and intermediate factors in bearing effects (e.g. a bifurcation bias in asset or routine terms may be offset by external corporate governance initiatives such as family councils and family trusts). Developing models in which independent, dependent, and intervening variables are causally adjacent (Scholes et al., 2020) is perhaps necessary to accumulate fine-grained knowledge to explain family firm’s internationalization heterogeneity.

 oals: Economic and Non-economic Goals, G and Socioemotional Wealth The socioemotional wealth (SEW) thesis is the only home-grown theory of family business to date. Generally speaking, the theory of socioemotional wealth assumes that family firm strategic behaviour will be governed first and foremost by a desire to protect and grow their non-financial, socioemotional, or affective utilities including preserving the family’s control and influence, perpetuating family identity, serving the family’s prestige and status, supporting family bonds, preventing access to family firm assets, controlling decision rights, and prolonging their ability to transfer the business to future generations (Berrone et  al., 2010, 2012; Gómez-Mejía et  al., 2007, 2010). SEW theory is grounded in bounded rationality and behavioural theory (Cesinger et al., 2016). Under this logic, the family firm will be willing to absorb short-­ term financial losses if it means preserving or protecting SEW. However, while often conceived of as a single body of wealth, studies acknowledge that families have different attitudes to what precise dimension of SEW they prioritize or will seek to protect the most (Miller et al., 2015). When endangered (or perhaps conversely, when opportunities to accumulate its stock are presented), their attitudes towards strategies or specific courses of action may change. Several chapters in this Handbook present interesting insights into the role and functioning of SEW in family firm internationalization. For instance, Metsola et  al. (Chap. 3) hypothesize that SEW preservation has a negative association with a family SME’s degree of internationalization. SEW dimensions of family-heritage maintenance, family-controlled decision-making, familial relationship-building, and emotional decision-making also

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moderated the positive effects of networking and family SMEs’ degree of internationalization. I find this interesting as it enriches the insights of Cesinger et al. (2016) who found that although family firms appear to internationalize gradually, it is due to SEW considerations and not the gradual accumulation of knowledge predicted under Johanson and Vahlne (1977, 2009). Indeed, Metsola et al. reaffirm the restraining role of SEW and the economizing role of networking in offsetting the dysfunction of SEW. The effects of SEW appear more far-reaching, though. Kampouri and Plakoyiannaki (Chap. 8) find that initial entry node decisions are shaped by family owners’ identification with the business. But, instead of changing entry nodes thereafter, family firms tended to maintain relationships with their initial entry nodes rather than searching for new international partners, due to the emotional attachment of the family owners with their entry nodes. This is consistent with studies that report family firms prioritizing trust (Cesinger et al., 2016; Scholes et al., 2015) and relationships with actors with which they share common interests and values (Kontinen & Ojala, 2012). Through familiarity and extended periods of interaction, trust mitigates concerns that non-family members (as outsiders) potentially endanger SEW (Cesinger et  al., 2016; Chrisman et al., 2007). Indeed, Metsola (Chap. 10) shows that family firms with higher levels of SEW were more active in building close foreign partner relationships, consistent with this logic. As a note of caution, however, Metsola draws attention to how studies are yet to provide evidence on how family firms balance economic and non-economic (SEW) goals in their internationalization endeavours. These insights create an opportunity to consider what happens to these relationships when SEW preservation is in jeopardy (e.g. such as in crisis times) and whether family firms modulate their behaviour. The relationship between SEW and networking (essential for the internationalization of family firms, as this Handbook makes very clear), and their co-functioning in unleashing or restraining the degree of internationalization, is a complex and nuanced one. First, we still know relatively little about the goal-setting process in family firms (Kotlar & De Massis, 2013). Kuiken et  al. (Chap. 5) attempt to unpack the role played by multiple goals from the viewpoint of behavioural theory of the firm in understanding family firm internationalization. This is a helpful starting point for future research. Second, we know little about the priority family firms attach to different dimensions of SEW or what happens when different combinations of SEW dimensions are either at risk or face opportunity for enrichment (Miller et al., 2015). Simply put, SEW is not a single, homogeneous body of non-economic wealth. Third, generally, our current body of assumptions about SEW originates from (relatively) stable times.

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However, internationalization may become a requirement for survival, and not a choice, when domestic markets deteriorate or face considerable disruption (Georgiadou et al., 2020).

F amily Social Capital Relationships and Network Ties It is very clear from this Handbook that networks and relationships play a fundamental role in the internationalization of family firms. In many ways, networks and relationships are vital for the vast majority of SMEs who internationalize, whether “born global” or late, traditional internationalizing SMEs (Hughes et al., 2019). Networks can be considered from at least three different vantage points: network structure, network content, and network behaviour (Hughes et  al., 2014). Effort to develop network relationships results in social capital. Family firms are unique because they possess a separate category of social capital, family social capital (Herrero & Hughes, 2019), that non-family firms can only reproduce imperfectly (Herrero, 2018). Social capital is a potentially powerful asset enabling access to new resources and knowledge. However, it is not without its limitations. Greater embeddedness in strong ties can generate dependence, redundancy, and, for family firms, complex lock-ins that prevent new information, ideas, knowledge, and resources from entering the network and the family firm (Herrero & Hughes, 2019; Hughes & Perrons, 2011; Hughes et al., 2014). As a rule, family firms need a combination of internal family ties (its family social capital) and external organizational ties (its organizational social capital) to perform well or risk dysfunctional effects including ignoring new information and impeding innovation, transfer of dysfunctional family characteristics into the family firm’s broader network, and restrict new external ties from causing organizational advantages to vanish (Adler & Kwon, 2002; Arregle et  al., 2007; Herrero & Hughes, 2019; Leana & Van Buren, 1999; Nahapiet & Ghoshal, 1998; Portes, 1998; Uzzi, 1996; Zahra, 2010). We still have much to learn about the role of network ties and social capital in family firm outcomes (including internationalization). Korhonen et al. (Chap. 7) shed interesting new light on phenomena akin to social capital these authors build on the notion of the “social legacy” of founders in family firms in conjunction with their interpersonal networks and its effects on the ties of their successors over an intergenerational period of time. I find this contribution fascinating because it draws attention to the public and private component of social capital. For instance, social capital

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held by one person in the family firm may support another, but only partly. I ask whether a founder’s social capital, or social legacy, can transfer to a next-­ generation successor and whether in doing so it loses strength, fidelity, or usefulness. Korhonen et al. further observe that historical contingencies work to endorse the founders’ “social legacies” in the successor generations’ international networking, putting forward the concept of “international networking legacy”. Moreover, Batas et al. (Chap. 12) find that different family structures were linked to inherited social capital. Crucially, this legacy may be an advantage or a disadvantage for successors’ own approaches to international networking. A frequently neglected factor compared to network structure is network behaviour (Hughes et al., 2014). I am relieved to see a discussion of network behaviour in this Handbook. Fuerst (Chap. 14) reveals from a micro-­ perspective the networking behaviour of family and non-family member entrepreneurs in a Columbian case study, shedding light on how networking unfolds over time. San Román et al. (Chap. 11) present the case of the Spanish family multinational, Iberostar Group, documenting how its efforts to bed itself as a trustworthy partner for foreign partners led to its domestic and international growth, providing access to foreign markets and activating a learning process that developed its ability to venture internationally. This social capital provided reputation and trust, reliability and long-term vision, and, perhaps curiously, appeared to cross borders, shedding new light on the potential reach of social capital. Relatedly, Caffarena and Discua Cruz (Chap. 14) show the power of social capital and ethnic networks to support migrant families to internationalize their family business. Their work draws attention to whether social capital is a single, homogenous asset or one potentially specific to and different across groups within which it is conceived. Caffarena and Discua Cruz also suggest a continued reliance on specific networks to aide in internationalization. This may suggest that family firms’ tendencies to rely on trust and long-standing relationships (as discussed above) risk dependence. Dependence can be destructive to future endeavours (Bouncken et al., 2020; Hughes and Perrons, 2011). Many new research opportunities arise from the chapters dedicated to family firms’ networks and relationships for the study of family firm internationalization. I will comment on a few that strike me as especially interesting. First, a pertinent question after reading the chapter in this Handbook dedicated to network relationships and family firm internationalization is whether we can ever study the latter without at least some consideration of the former. It seems, at the minimum, that network ties or some relational components should be considered as control variables to guard against alternative

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explanations in future studies. Second, I would argue that much more work is needed on network behaviour to understand how family firms build trust and guard against its loss. Concurrently, research is needed to understand how the behaviour of family firms change when distrust emerges in their relationships or in instances of trust violations. Firms can rarely abandon ties, and given the priority family firms attach to long-lasting, trusting relationships, a higher degree of dependence is likely to be a feature of these ties. Even in instances of trust violations then, family firms are unlikely to be able to simply abandon those relationships, creating a series of potential implications. Third, and perhaps relatedly, we cannot exclude the probability that the preference of family firms for long-lasting, enduring relationships is simultaneously connected to SEW and its preservation. That such long-­lasting ties are purposefully built indicates a deliberate strategy. Since strategic decisions in family firms are directly connected to SEW, its preservation, and its growth, decisions about network content, structure, and behaviour are likely to revolve around such parameters of SEW that are especially meaningful to a family firm. Fourth, I am intrigued by the question of how might social capital function across borders considering the likely relationship between SEW and network behaviour. SEW preservation extends to the international context. Assuming a bifurcation bias, family firms may keep relationships quite separate creating little pockets of social capital, dyadic, and perhaps idiosyncratic to each relationship, with little spillover (because greater spillover implies a larger network less amenable to control with greater expectations of reciprocity that would require more investment from the family firm). The Iberostar case by San Román et  al. (Chap. 11) is then quite intriguing because it departs from this logic.

Institutions Institutions are an inescapable reality for any internationalizing business. The (family) firm experiences pressure from the socio-cultural, regulatory, and political institutions of its host country that compel obedience in exchange for legitimacy. The concept is rooted in institutional theory and ideas of isomorphism (DiMaggio & Powell, 1983), defined as pressures that could cause an organization to alter its structure and behaviour and conform to an institutional pattern (Mellahi et al., 2013). Isomorphism can be coercive (where patterns are imposed on firms by a powerful authority to obtain legitimacy), mimetic (resulting from standardized responses to uncertainty wherein firms duplicate the patterns of successful rivals or standard bearers), or normative

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(informed by professionalism, where firms adopt patterns considered appropriate for the host environment). For the family firm, such institutions are potentially problematic as they require some ceding of control (contrary to SEW preservation). However, the family firm may also seek institutional approval as a signal of its good name. Nonetheless, whether the firm converges with or diverges from these host institutions depends on a second source of institutional pressure: the firm itself. Institutional duality (Kostova & Roth, 2002), the notion that a subsidiary is buffeted by the institutional pressure of both its host environment and its parent organization, affects the performance of subsidiaries (Hughes et al., 2017). For example, the parent organization (the headquarters) often seeks to transfer a reservoir of practices based on well-established capabilities (Dunning, 1988; He et al., 2013; Peng, 2001), pressurizing the internal legitimacy of the subsidiary (Hughes et al., 2017; Kostova & Roth, 2002; Mellahi et al., 2013). The inescapable conclusion then is that for the family firm, venturing internationally—be it through exports, joint ventures, or subsidiaries (etc.)—will lead the family business inexorably to encounter strong institutional pressures. It must then decide how it will respond to those pressures. Several chapters in this Handbook (implicitly or explicitly) draw attention to institutions and their potential effects on family firm internationalization. Sestu (Chap. 4) provides a framework for family firms’ foreign entry strategies; Laari-Salmela et al. (Chap. 6) draw attention to the MNC as a complex web of interdependent relationships with subsidiaries embedded in their own local networks, implicitly suggesting the presence of institutional duality; and Debellis and Rondi (Chap. 9) consider the global factory model proposing the control that large family multinational enterprises will seek to implant on their global value chains, again implicitly raising questions of institutions. More directly, Kahor and Stranskov (Chap. 16) focus on the effects of home country institutions and institutional processes that shape firms’ ability to access resources in their home environment. Interestingly, these authors suggest that these institutional factors may enhance the legitimacy of foreign operations and activities but that informal and poor home country institutional factors may restrain firms’ internationalization. In a study of a developing-­country family SME in Guatemala (Chap. 17 by Godinez and Sierra), however, a potentially different role is set out for domestic resources in comparison to the position set out by Kalhor and Stranskov, and these authors also acknowledge the role of networks in substituting or filling resource gaps. Finally, Jayakumar (Chap. 15) considers how strong

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host-­country push and specific family factors (i.e. institutional pressures) may reverse their internationalization journey, de-internationalizing in the process. Institutions represent a green-field opportunity for research on family firm internationalization. First, the chapters in this Handbook point to tensions between home and host country institutions that are of interest to understanding the motivation for internationalization. Second, the functioning of host country institutions and their relative pressure against those from the parental organization may affect the ability of family subsidiaries to function effectively when internationalizing. Third, it is not yet known how family firms respond to competing institutional pressures. Finally, we tend to think of internationalization as a continuous process which, once started, escalates in its magnitude and commitment. Studies of de-internationalization are refreshing for the new insights they can create on existing phenomena when (family) firms choose to scale back their international operations.

Concluding Remarks This is an excellent Handbook. It will serve as a superb reference and resource for scholars across the family business and international business domains. It stands out as a powerful anchor point to inform and spearhead future research at the interface of the family and internationalization. It provides an overview and reference point about the status of family firm internationalization and contains interesting and insightful chapters, provoking new questions for family business and international business scholarship. It is compelling reading for those in need of a single source of knowledge and inspiration of family firm internationalization research. As I hope is apparent from my enthusiasm in writing this Foreword, this is an exciting time to be working on family firm internationalization. While I endeavour to report on the things that pique my interest and highlight important opportunities, there are many questions and opportunities to discover within these pages. I encourage readers to deep dive into these chapters and absorb the wealth of insights available! You can be assured that this Handbook, the first of its kind, provides you with the latest concepts and ideas, and will expand your knowledge of this important phenomenon. Loughborough, UK

Mathew Hughes

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References Adler, P. S., & Kwon, S. W. (2002). Social capital: Prospects for a new concept. The Academy of Management Review, 27, 17–40. Arregle, J. L., Duran, P., Hitt, M. A., & Van Essen, M. (2017). Why is family firms’ internationalization unique? A meta-analysis. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 41(5), 801–831. Arregle, J.-L., Hitt, M. A., & Mari, I. (2019). A missing link in family firms’ internationalization research: Family structures. Journal of International Business Studies, 50, 809–825. Arregle, J., Hitt, M. A., Sirmon, D. G., & Very, P. (2007). The development of organizational social capital: Attributes of family firms. Journal of Management Studies, 44(1), 73–95. Berrone, P., Cruz, C., Gómez-Mejía, L.  R., & Larraza-Kintana, M. (2010). Socioemotional wealth and corporate responses to institutional pressures: Do family-controlled firms pollute less? Administrative Science Quarterly, 55, 82–113. Berrone, P., Cruz, C., & Gómez-Mejía, L. R. (2012). Socioemotional wealth in family firms: Theoretical dimensions, assessment approaches, and agenda for future research. Family Business Review, 25, 258–279. Bouncken, R.  B., Hughes, M., Ratzmann, M., Cesinger, B., & Pesch, R. (2020). Family firms, alliance governance, and mutual knowledge creation. British Journal of Management, in press. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-­8551.12408 Carney, M. (2005). Corporate governance and competitive advantage in family-­ controlled firms. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 29(3), 249–265. Cesinger, B., Hughes, M., Mensching, H., Bouncken, R., Fredrich, V., & Kraus, S. (2016). A socioemotional wealth perspective on how collaboration intensity, trust, and international market knowledge affect family firms’ multinationality. Journal of World Business, 51(4), 586–599. Chrisman, J. J., Chua, J. H., Kellermanns, F. W., & Chang, E. P. (2007). Are family managers agents or stewards? An exploratory study in privately held family firms. Journal of Business Research, 60, 1030–1038. Davis, J., Schoorman, F., & Donaldson, L. (1997). Toward a stewardship theory of management. Academy of Management Review, 22(1), 20–47. DiMaggio, P. J., & Powell, W. W. (1983). The iron cage revisited: Institutionalism and collective rationality in organizational fields. American Sociological Review, 48, 147–160. Dunning, J. H. (1988). The eclectic paradigm of international production: A restatement and some possible extensions. Journal of International Business Studies, 19, 1–31. Georgiadou, E., Hughes, M., & Viala, C. (2020). Commercial diplomacy as a mechanism for passive-reactive SME internationalization: Overcoming liabilities of outsidership. European Journal of International Management, in press. https://doi. org/10.1504/ejim.2021.10029764

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Gómez-Mejía, L.  R., Haynes, K.  T., Núñez-Nickel, M., Jacobson, K.  J. L., & Moyano-Fuentes, J. (2007). Socioemotional wealth and business risks in family-­ controlled firms: Evidence from Spanish olive oil mills. Administrative Science Quarterly, 52, 106–137. Gómez-Mejía, L. R., Makri, M., & Larraza Kintana, M. (2010). Diversification decisions in family-controlled firms. Journal of Management Studies, 47, 223–252. He, X., Brouthers, K. D., & Filatotchev, I. (2013). Resource-based and institutional perspectives on export channel selection and export performance. Journal of Management, 39, 27–47. Herrero, I., (2018). How familial is Family Social Capital? Analysing bonding social capital in family and nonfamily firms. Family Business Review, 31(4), 441–459. Herrero, I., & Hughes, M. (2019). When family social capital is too much of a good thing. Journal of Family Business Strategy, 10(3), 100271. Hu, Q., & Hughes, M. (2020). Radical innovation in family firms: A systematic analysis and research agenda. International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research, in press. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJEBR-­11-­2019-­0658 Hughes, M., & Perrons, R. (2011). Shaping and re-shaping social capital in buyer-­ supplier relationships. Journal of Business Research, 64(2), 164–171. Hughes, M., Cesinger, B., Cheng, C.-F., Schüßler, F., & Kraus S. (2019). A configurational analysis of network and knowledge variables explaining Born Globals’ and late internationalizing SMEs’ international performance. Industrial Marketing Management, 80, 172–187. Hughes, M., Morgan, R. E., Ireland, R. D., & Hughes, P. (2014). Social capital and learning from network relationships: A problem of absorptive capacity. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 8(3), 214–233. Hughes, M., Powell, T.  H., Chung, L., & Mellahi, K. (2017). Institutional and resource-based explanations for subsidiary performance. British Journal of Management, 28(3), 407–424. Johanson, J., & Vahlne, J.-E. (1977). The internationalization process of the firm—A model of knowledge development and increasing foreign market commitments. Journal of International Business Studies, 18, 23–32. Johanson, J., & Vahlne, J.-E. (2009). The Uppsala internationalization process model revisited: From liability of foreignness to liability of outsidership. Journal of International Business Studies, 40, 1411–1431. Kontinen, T., & Ojala, A. (2010). The internationalisation of family businesses: A review of extant research. Journal of Family Business Strategy, 1, 97–107. Kontinen, T., & Ojala, A. (2012). Social capital in the international operations of family SMEs. Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development, 19, 39–55. Kostova, T., & Roth, K. (2002). Adoption of an organizational practice by subsidiaries of multinational corporations: Institutional and relational effects. Academy of Management Journal, 45, 215–233.

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Kotlar, J., and De Massis, A. (2013). Goal setting in family firms: Goal diversity, social interactions, and collective commitment to family-centered goals. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 37(6), 1263–1288. Leana, C. R., & Van Buren, H. J. (1999). Organizational social capital and employment practices. Academy of Management Review, 24, 538–555. Madison, K., Holt, D. T, Kellermanns, F. W., & Ranft, A. L. (2016). Viewing family firm behavior and governance through the lens of agency and stewardship theories. Family Business Review, 29(1), 65–93. Mellahi, K., Demirbag, M., Collings, D., Tatoglu, E., & Hughes, M. (2013). Similarly different: A comparison of HRM practices in MNE subsidiaries and local firms in Turkey. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 24(12), 2239–2368. Metsola, J., Leppäaho, T., Paavilainen-Mäntymäki, E., & Plakoyiannaki, E. (2020). Process in family business internationalisation: The state of the art and ways forward. International Business Review, 29(2), 101665. Miller, D., and Le Breton-Miller, I. (2006). Family governance and firm performance: Agency, stewardship, and capabilities. Family Business Review, 19(1), 73–87. Miller, D., Wright, M., Le Breton-Miller, I., & Scholes, L. (2015). Resources and innovation in family businesses: The Janus-face of socioemotional preferences. California Management Review, 58(1), 20–41. Nahapiet, J., & Ghoshal, S. (1998). Social capital, intellectual capital, and the organizational advantage. Academy of Management Review, 23, 242–266. Peng, M. W. (2001). The resource-based view and international business. Journal of Management, 27, 803–829. Portes, A. (1998). Social capital: Its origins and applications in modern sociology. Annual Review of Sociology, 24, 1–24. Pukall, T. J., & Calabrò, A. (2014). The internationalisation of family firms: A critical review and integrative model. Family Business Review, 27(2), 103–125. Reuber, A. R. (2016). An assemblage-theoretic perspective on the internationalization processes of family firms. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 40(6), 1269–1286. Scholes, L., Hughes, M., Wright, M., De Massis, A., & Kotlar, J. (2020). Family management and family guardianship: Governance effects on family firm innovation strategy. Journal of Family Business Strategy, conditionally accepted. Scholes, L., Mustafa, M., & Chen, S. (2015). Internationalization of small family firms: The influence of family from a socioemotional wealth perspective. Thunderbird International Business Review, 58, 131–146. Schulze, W. S., Lubatkin, M. H., Dino, R. N., & Buchholtz, A. K. (2001). Agency relationships in family firms: Theory and evidence. Organization Science, 12(2), 99–116. Suess, J. (2014). Family governance–Literature review and the development of a conceptual model. Journal of Family Business Strategy, 5(2), 138–155.

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Uzzi, B. (1996). The sources and consequences of embeddedness for the economic performance of organizations: The network effect. American Sociological Review, 61(4), 674–698. Verbeke, A., Yuan, W., & Kano, L. (2020). A values-based analysis of bifurcation bias and its impact on family firm internationalization. Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 37, 449–477. Zahra, S.  A. (2010). Harvesting family firms’ organizational social capital: A relational perspective. Journal of Management Studies, 47(2), 345–366.

Foreword 2: Reflections on the Family Firm Internationalization Literature

Introduction Worldwide, family firms are in the majority, some are major international players, and yet they have received less attention in the international business literature than large firms with dispersed ownership. There is still no consensus on the impact of the family mode of governance on a firm’s internationalization level and processes. We do not know whether family firms are more or less likely than non-family firms to sell to foreign customers, whether they internationalize differently, or whether and how their internationalization is influenced by home and host country institutions. Interest in family firms is growing. In the past ten years, there has been a marked increase in the number of scholarly articles devoted to them (Casillas & Moreno-Menendez, 2017). All the same, after meta-analysing 76 empirical studies of the impact of family governance on internationalization, Arregle et  al. (2017) concluded that “the association between the family vs. non-­ family dimension is basically null and characterized by its high variance (heterogeneity)” (Arregle, Hitt & Mari, 2019: 809). In this Foreword, I suggest possible reasons for the lack of definite answers to some of the research questions posed in this book.

 hat Features of Family firm Governance Are Likely W to Impact Its Internationalization? To study family firm internationalization is to research the relationship between two concepts, family firms on one hand and internationalization on xxi

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the other. A useful starting point is to look at what is meant by “family firm”, and to ascertain whether there is a fit between how family firms have been defined and operationalized in the literature and the theories used to explain their internationalization. The most restrictive way to define a family firm is a firm fully owned and managed by a family, with a history (or intent) of intergenerational succession (Salvato, Chirico, Melin & Seidl, 2019). A broader definition looks at family ownership, differentiating between when a family has sufficient ownership to exercise control over a firm—even if it does not manage it, that is, a family-­ owned firm—and when it has neither undisputed control nor participation in management, that is, a family-influenced one. One would expect to observe differences in the extent of internationalization between family and non-family firms only if they act in fundamentally different ways. In other words, if family firms are defined in such a way as to make them almost indistinguishable from other types of firms, then one would not expect to see marked differences in their degree of internationalization. What is then truly distinctive about family firms? One possibility is concentrated ownership. In this case, there is no principal-agent problem because full ownership aligns the goals of firm owners with those of managers. Note that this does not ipso facto mean that managers/owners will maximize profits. Being undisputed owners, managers of family-managed firms are able to maximize whatever they wish. The literature on socioemotional wealth (SEW) makes this clear (Berrone, Cruz, & Gomez-Mejia, 2011). Monetary income is only one of many parameters in an individual’s utility function, so unless fully constrained by principals to maximize profits, agents can be expected to engage in activities that provide other sources of utility. A start-up entrepreneur with easy access to funds may spend them on peripheral hobbies or on lavish office decor. A CEO of a large company with dispersed shareholders and a compliant board can indulge in personal whims (with sometimes disastrous results as in the case of Jean-Marie Messier and Vivendi). So, ownership concentration per se may not lead to clear differences in behaviour between family firms and other firms. To argue that SEW maximization will lead to different outcomes for family firms, one needs to look at other family firm characteristics than just concentrated ownership. Firms owned by family members, but not managed by them, may behave more like non-family firms than those which are both family-owned and managed because the separation of ownership and management has re-created a principal-agent problem, a conjecture supported by Kim, Hoskisson, and Zyung (2019). Likewise, sharing ownership with non-family owners leads to principal-principal problems,

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as the goals of the family and those of other shareholders may conflict. Then, depending on the institutional context, for example, the extent of legal protection of minority shareholders (Arregle et al., 2017), family firms may be forced to curb their pursuit of non-financial goals and to behave like non-­ family firms. The intent and practice of leaving ownership and management to one’s offspring would seem to be an important dimension of family firm governance. It makes it possible to distinguish family-managed firms from entrepreneurial start-ups owned and managed by their founder(s) (alone or in partnership). A start-up founder, intending to sell the firm as soon as possible to other firms or to the general public through an IPO, is bound to have a shorter-term horizon than a family firm owner eager to pass the firm to descendants. As in family firms, the coherence of the management team in start-up partnerships comes from co-ownership in contrast to firms with dispersed ownership where the interests of the managers may not align with those of the owners. But there is one subtle difference: A family has a wider panoply of tools to maintain management team cohesion than a partnership with non-family partners. A family can use the threat of ostracism, for instance, a deviant family manager might no longer be included in family events (Pollak, 1985). It is also easier for family managers to monitor one another since they have deeper knowledge of each other, often built over a long period of time, than is usually the case with start-up partners. Multi-generation succession also facilitates the build-up of social capital. Owners of family firms will be trusted because they are less likely to engage in opportunism or bounded reliability today as it might damage the prospects for their offspring in the future. In other words, multi-generation succession lengthens the shadow of the future. It raises the pay-off of maintaining a good reputation because it strengthens the identification of the manager with the firm. Misbehaving CEOs of firms with dispersed ownership have less at stake than managers of family firms, whose firms often bear their name, and who are embedded in the social fabric of the community where the firm is located. One would therefore expect family firms with intergeneration intent to care more about protecting firm reputation than family firms without such intent and, of course, more than firms in which family plays no part at all. As I argue below, a stellar reputation allows family firms with intergeneration intent to develop trusting relationships with customers and suppliers, making it possible, for example, to co-develop products with them. In short, what strongly distinguishes family firms from other types of firms are family management and transgenerational intent. Partial family ownership introduces principal-principal conflicts which may cause family-owned

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Table 1  Match between theories and family-firm types Impact on internationalization scale and scope Family firms selling mass-market products Family firms selling niche products Impact of SEW

Family-­ influenced

Family-­ Family-­ owned and owned managed

+

Family-owned and managed with intergenerational intent

−−

−−

+

++

−−

−−

firms to behave in ways that do not differ much from other firms. Ownership sans management will result in principal-agent problems, just as it does in other firms. It is also difficult to argue that the time orientation of family-firm owners who do not intend to pass on the firm to offspring differs in any significant way from that of any other types of firms. In short, the sharper contrasts between family firms and non-family firms are likely to be observed between non-family firms where shareholders effectively constrain managers to maximize profits, and family-owned and managed firms with intergenerational succession intent. Table 1 summarizes these arguments, with two minus or plus signs signifying strong predicted differences between family firms and other firms in the extent of internationalization, one plus or minus indicating a weak effect, and no sign signifying no effect.

How to Measure Internationalization Internationalization is the extent (scale) and the inter-country distribution (scope) of sales to foreign customers. A firm can serve such customers through exports from the home country or through production in a foreign country. Sometimes firms use a mix of the two modes, so both must be taken into account. Only foreign-based production destined for local or third-country customers should be considered, as production abroad for domestic customers does not constitute foreign sales. Internationalization scale is generally measured by the ratio of foreign sales to total sales (FSTS) (e.g. Fang et al., 2018), although some (e.g. Bhaumik, Driffield & Pal, 2010) have used the ratio of foreign assets to total assets (FATA), a measure which assumes that all foreign sales arise from overseas production and sales subsidiaries (i.e. that excludes exports). FSTS and FATA have limitations. First, because they are ratios, they are affected by changes in both the numerator (foreign sales; foreign assets) and the denominator (total sales; total assets), so changes in the

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ratios may result from changes in domestic sales or assets only. A second limitation is that they do not reflect the diversity of foreign markets served. Hence, a firm can have an FSTS ratio of 0.9, with either 90% of its sales to a culturally similar country across the border, say a Swiss firm located in the Germanspeaking part of Switzerland selling to Germany, or 10% of its sales going to nine culturally distant countries (Hennart, 2011; Verbeke & Forootan, 2012). Some authors (e.g. Singla, Veliyath & George, 2014) have used a firm’s total number of foreign subsidiaries, or the ratio of its foreign subsidiaries to its total number of subsidiaries, as reported in annual reports or other administrative documents. Subsidiaries, however, are administrative units, with only an approximate correspondence to actual production units, so the measure can be unreliable.1 The inter-country dispersion of sales is called internationalization scope. This has been measured by the number of countries where the firm has at least one subsidiary and by the entropy index of foreign sales. Both of these measures have serious drawbacks. Counting the number of countries where the firm has subsidiaries (as in Zhara, 2003 and Arregle et al., 2017) is problematic because it does not provide information on the geographical distribution of sales: a firm may have subsidiaries in 150 foreign countries, but most of its sales in a single one, with others performing minor operations. Other studies have measured international scope with an entropy index, which is meant to measure the geographic dispersion of a firm’s total sales (e.g. Bauweraerts, Sciascia, Naldi & Mazzola, 2019; D’Angelo, Majocchi & Buck, 2016; Sanchez-Bueno & Usero, 2014).2 The problem with an entropy index is that it only measures dispersion, not scale. Hence, an SME selling half of its production at home and small amounts (say €1000 each) to five different foreign countries has exactly the same entropy index as a firm selling €500 million at home and €100  million to five different foreign countries (Hennart, Majocchi & Forlani, 2019). This is highly problematic if international scope is meant to measure the degree of commitment to international markets and the resources needed to achieve it. Another drawback is that the highest value  For example, the list of Enron’s foreign subsidiaries in its 2000 10K report to the US Securities and Exchange Commission runs to 64 pages. Many of them appear to be tax-avoiding special purpose entities—692 subsidiaries are incorporated in the Cayman Islands and 151 in the Netherlands, two countries where Enron did not have any physical activities at the time. Many foreign activities are in subsidiaries incorporated in Enron’s home country, the United States. Enron’s ill-fated Dabhol Indian power plant, for example, was owned by a Mauritius subsidiary, itself owned by a Dutch company, itself owned by a Cayman Island subsidiary, which was then owned by a Delaware subsidiary of Enron, Enron India, LLC. A superficial reading would count Dabhol as a domestic subsidiary of Enron. It is clear in Enron’s case that there is little correspondence between administrative units and activities. 2  D’Angelo, Majocchi, and Buck (2016) calculate this entropy ratio on the FSTS ratio for each major world region. 1

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of the index is when every country has exactly the same share of sales; however, even if a firm were to be successful at developing sales in each of the world’s countries or regions, the share of its sales would not be the same in all countries, as some countries have more potential customers than others. In other words, an entropy index does not tell us the extent to which a firm has saturated all the foreign markets available. To remedy these weaknesses, some authors have used composite measures. Purkayastha, Manolova, and Edelman (2018), for instance, sum up a firm’s FSTS, FATA, the absolute number of countries where the firm has subsidiaries, and the ratio of the number of countries where it has subsidiaries over the number of countries where firms in the sample have at least one subsidiary. Such composite indexes suffer from all the criticisms that can be levied against their constituent parts; moreover, the choice of the measures to include and their respective weight is arbitrary. A much more theoretically satisfying solution is to use a gravity model. Gravity models have been successful at predicting the level of a country’s exports to other countries (see the survey by Wang, Wei & Liu, 2010). They are based on Newton’s law of gravity that states that the attraction between two objects is proportional to their mass and inversely proportional to the distance between them. By analogy, Tinbergen (1962) posited that the level of economic transactions between two countries depends on their respective economic size—proxied by their respective GDP—and by the distance—geographical, economic, institutional, political, and cultural—between them. A gravity model can be used to predict the sales of a given firm to a given foreign country—or foreign region; we can then test whether family firm governance affects the level of those sales, keeping constant other firm characteristics, such as size and age. This approach makes it possible to simultaneously measure a firm’s depth and breadth of internationalization since it compares its actual and potential sales in each country. For instance, firms which sell much less in most countries than predicted by a gravity model, but much more in a few others, have a low level of international scope. As far as I know, with the exception of Hennart et al. (2019), gravity models have not been used in the family firm internationalization literature.

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 raditional Theories of Family T Firm Internationalization The Uppsala model, as developed by Johanson and Vahlne (1977, 2009) and their followers, explicitly argues that internationalization is a slow, gradual process, and implicitly argues that it is costly and risky. For those authors, foreign countries differ in culture, language, and economic conditions from the internationalizing firm’s home base, and from each other. The internationalizing firm must therefore find out, for each foreign country, how to identify foreign customers and persuade them to buy, and how to adapt the marketing mix to their tastes and use conditions. Uppsala scholars also posit that the most efficient way to serve foreign customers is through foreign manufacturing plants, often an expensive and risky endeavour requiring an in-depth knowledge of each foreign country as it involves hiring and supervising a foreign labour force, finding local suppliers, and dealing with host country governments. Uppsala scholars assume that a firm will commit to developing sales in a foreign country if, and only if, it has accumulated experience of that country. That experience can only be had by being physically present in the country; so, because this takes time, the firm will slowly and progressively expand in one foreign market at a time, slowing down the internationalization process. A more recent version of the Uppsala model (Johanson & Vahlne, 2009) puts greater emphasis on the need to penetrate foreign country networks. Since being accepted in a network takes time and repeated interactions, this does not affect the model’s core prediction that internationalization is a slow market-by-market endeavour that requires the internationalizing firm to accumulate local knowledge—in this version, knowledge of which host country networks to enter. The main theories of family firm internationalization (see the surveys by Kontinen & Ojala, 2010, Fernández & Nieto, 2013 and Pukall & Calabrò, 2014) have all been heavily influenced by this view. The argument is that family firms will internationalize less than other types of firms because they do not have (1) internationally experienced managers and (2) sufficient funds to undertake international expansion. Family firms are said to lack the needed internationally experienced managers in-house because their skill pool is limited to family members and they are reluctant to recruit internationally experienced managers from the outside (Graves & Thomas, 2006). They are also supposed to lack the necessary financial resources because of their unwillingness to tap outside finance, since it may dilute their control of the business (Claver et  al., 2009; Gallo et  al., 2004; Gomez-Mejia et  al., 2010, 2011;

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Fernández & Nieto, 2006; Muñoz-Bullon & Sanchez-Bueno, 2012; Sanchez-­ Bueno & Usero, 2014). A more recent argument as to why family firms may have difficulty internationalizing is that the backgrounds of family members are likely to be more homogeneous than those of outside managers (Tsang, 2018). Consequently, the networks of their management team are more redundant than those of outside managers. Their networks are also likely to be more domestic—and if international, more regional—than those of firms that bring in managers from the outside (Banalieva & Eddleston, 2011; Kontinen & Ojala, 2012). To sum up, family firm internationalization scholars have assumed that the Uppsala way of foreign expansion, which requires managers with extensive experience of target foreign countries, insidership in their networks, and substantial financial resources, applies across the board to all firms. Since they believe that family-managed firms do not have—and are unwilling to acquire—these resources, they conclude that family-managed firms will have a lower level of internationalization than non-family firms.

 iche Business Models and Family N Firm Internationalization In essence, all of the aforementioned arguments as to why family-managed firms will find it difficult to sell abroad are rooted in the Uppsala assumptions that (1) selling abroad requires a huge investment to introduce a product to consumers and educate them about it, to adapt it to country-specific conditions, and to set up production facilities abroad, and (2) that each foreign market is fundamentally different, and hence successful foreign market penetration requires country-specific experience. Hennart (2014) and Hennart, Majocchi, and Forlani (2019) argue, on the other hand, that such difficulties are only faced by firms with a mass-market business model. Many family-­ managed firms, however, have adopted a totally different business model, a global niche model. That business model is well suited to a family-managed firm with intergenerational succession intent, and this explains why, despite the arguments widely found in the family firm internationalization literature, many family-managed firms are highly internationalized (e.g. Colli, Garcia-­ Canal & Guillen, 2013; De Massis, Audretsch, Uhlaner & Kammerlander, 2018; Magnani & Zucchella, 2019). Niche products are unique and cater to the specialized needs and tastes of a limited number of customers (Toften & Hammervoll, 2013). As a result,

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they have very few, if any, substitutes, giving their producers some degree of market power (Merrilees & Tiessen, 1999). Their uniqueness may be based on advanced technology, artistic design, high-quality workmanship, or unique provenance. A niche business model allows for easy and extensive internationalization. In their 2019 article, Hennart et al. use the example of the Ciclotte, an exercise bike designed and built by Lamiflex in Bergamo, Italy. The Ciclotte is artistically designed and exquisitely built of high-quality carbon fibre, and fits beautifully in a luxury mansion or on the deck of an expensive yacht. In contrast to exercise bikes found on Amazon with retail prices starting at around €100, the Ciclotte sells upward from €10,000 (Hedd Magazine, 2018), and it is targeted at affluent customers located all over the world, members of a global, cosmopolitan elite who share a taste for high design and luxury. They may be one in a million and, for that simple reason, most of them are located outside Italy. How does an SME like Lamiflex reach potential customers? Let’s revisit the challenges of selling abroad identified by the Uppsala model. The first is to make foreign consumers aware of the offering and to persuade them to buy. While this is challenging for sellers of garden-variety exercise bikes in foreign markets where there are domestic substitutes, buyers of niche products—luxury products or specialized B2B ones—are few in number and belong to communities of experienced users, who often exchange information about suppliers and their products. Such users often directly approach sellers, saving the latter the cost of customer acquisition. Users of niche products, whether luxury or technical, tend to have homogeneous tastes, so niche products do not have to be adapted to each foreign country, as is the case for mass-market goods. Buyers of mass-market products are unlikely to pay high shipping charges to import them from overseas because they can find local substitutes. This forces manufacturers of mass-market products—even of those with a higher-than-average price tag like a Volvo car—to locate production relatively close to buyers. Niche products, on the other hand, have few or no local substitutes, so their buyers are willing to absorb shipping charges, making it possible for their sellers to export from a home base at very low marginal costs (Hennart, 2014).3 Note also that niche sellers do not need to become insiders in the networks of each target foreign country, as argued in the literature (e. g. Xu, Hitt & Dai, 2020; Banalieva & Eddleston, 2011), but instead need  An additional reason for serving foreign customers through exports from the home base is that part of the attraction of niche products comes from their geographical provenance. The Ciclotte website emphasizes that the bike is manufactured in Italy (Hennart et al., 2019). 3

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only penetrate one network—that of the international users of their product. Entry into that kind of network does not require foreign country experience, only familiarity with the product and its users, which family firms pursuing niche strategies are likely to have, especially if they are multi-generational. In sum, the internationalization handicaps that family firm internationalization scholars have assumed family-managed firms must face—lack of internationally experienced managers, of target country network insidership, and of finance—do not apply if they sell niche products. Because their customers have homogeneous tastes that can be served by exports, increasing the scale and scope of international activities will not pose managerial challenges for niche sellers. In fact, one could go further and argue that family-managed firms are uniquely suited to carrying out a global niche strategy. One major risk with that strategy is that larger competitors might attempt to invade the niche. There are two main defences against this. One is to maintain distinctiveness by continuously improving the product. Simon (2014) cites the motto of Flexi, a German family firm with a 70% world market share for retractable dog leashes: “We will do only one thing, but we do it better than anyone else”. The second defence is to establish and maintain strong links with customers by responding flexibly to their needs, even anticipating them. Magnani and Zucchella (2019: 149) write that the comparative advantage of the niche firms they observed was “based on the proactive identification of customers wherever they are located, anticipating their needs, solving their problems and ultimately co-creating value and innovating through customer interactions”. Family-managed firms are in a good position to carry out these two strategies (Hennart et al., 2019). Continuous improvement of product and processes requires a long-term outlook, which family-managed firms, free from the short-term demands of external shareholders, are more likely to have. This culture of high quality is often passed generations,4 as is the importance of maintaining strong bonds with suppliers and customers. Such bonds, the result of a long history of honest dealings, are a sine-qua-non condition for co-innovating with them (Coleman, 1990). Family-managed firms with intergeneration intent maximize in the long run, knowing that the reputation of the firm is tightly linked to that of the owning and managing family members because the firm bears their name. Reputation is always vulnerable to free-riding and a potential problem in publicly owned firms where managers  Hennart et al. (2019) cite Andrea Illy, the CEO of Illycaffé, manufacturer of one of the world’s best coffee: “When Grandfather Francesco founded the company he wanted to sell the best coffee in the world, and we are still working on it” (Fontevecchia, 2013). 4

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have a relatively short tenure—indeed, their opportunistic behaviour is often discovered after they have left the firm. By contrast, the managers of familymanaged firms are usually co-owners, whose interests are aligned with the firm itself. Employees of family firms tend also to have a longer tenure and a closer relationship with management than in publicly held firms (Miller & Le Breton-Miller, 2005; Simon, 2009). This increases the chance that they will uphold the firm’s reputation. In sum, family-managed firms with intergeneration intent possess the resources required to carry out global niche strategies, and those strategies allow them to internationalize with limited financial resources and purely domestic managers who are complete outsiders in foreign country networks (Hennart, 2014). Hennart et  al. (2019) tested this hypothesis on 9214 French, German, Italian, and Spanish SMEs. Correcting for endogeneity, they find that the higher the percentage of family members within the managerial team of family-­owned SMEs (their measure of family management), the lower the sales to eight foreign regions (compared to SMEs with lower or zero family management). Family-managed firms that sold niche products, on the other hand, were able to partially close the gap. Their results were robust. They were found in the overall sample, but also for each country, even though they have their own culture and institutions.

Implications for the Study of Family Firm Internationalization There are many other issues in family firm internationalization, but space constraints prevent me from discussing them here. One of them is endogeneity. Family governance is not randomly assigned to firms, so research that seeks to uncover performance differences between family firms and other firms needs to control for endogeneity. Very few family firm studies do (but see Hennart et al., 2019). There are also other sources of heterogeneity in family firms not discussed here, for instance, family structures (Arregle et  al., 2019). Nevertheless, this short survey has a number of implications for future research. For one, it is important to match theory to family firm type. The Uppsala-­ derived argument that family firms will be less likely to internationalize because they do not have the required managerial and financial resources to sell abroad only applies to family firms selling mass-market products and which are both family-owned and managed, since family firms with

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non-­family owners and those not managed by family members have already opened themselves to outside capital and to non-family managers. Equally, Uppsala-­based arguments do not apply to family-managed firms, especially those with transgenerational intent, which are following a global niche strategy. This strategy, which demands a long-term vision and the maintenance of a good reputation, will be harder to conduct if the family firm has minority shareholders clamouring for immediate profits and/or if it is implemented by non-family managers presumably with less emotional attachment to the firm. Likewise, the argument that SEW preservation will lead family firms to eschew internationalization because it is risky would seem to apply only to those family-managed firms which follow mass-market internationalization strategies. A second point is that a much better job of measuring internationalization is needed across the board. Specifically, research should make clear what exactly is being measured and how any measure might be affected by family firm attributes.5 A third implication is the need to relax the assumption that all family firms need to follow an Uppsala-type mass-market business model. As I have shown, family-managed firms that follow niche strategies are perfectly able to sell substantial amounts in a large number of foreign countries. While it seems plausible to expect that, in the case of family-managed firms following mass-­ market strategies, expanding into a “broader set of countries places significant demands on the ability of managers to deal with diverse institutional environments, creating substantial managerial challenges” (Arregle et al., 2017: 821), and that this constrains their internationalization breadth, this is not a challenge facing family-managed firms following niche strategies: for them, selling in twenty foreign countries requires the same level of management expertise as selling in one. Since the global niche strategy is suited to family-­ managed firms, while the Uppsala mass-market one is not, one might question why family-managed firms would ever attempt to pursue mass-market strategies. Perhaps family-managed firms are of two types: some will not engage at all in foreign sales, while others will be significant internationalizers. The overall effect observed when comparing the scale and scope of internationalization of family-managed versus other firms would then depend on the relative share of these two types of family-managed firms in the sample. This may explain why Arregle et al. (2017) and Hennart et al. (2019) find that family-managed firms internationalize less than other types of firms, but that  Arregle et al. (2017) note that the results of their meta-analysis of family firm internationalization hinge on the way internationalization is measured. 5

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Hennart et al. find the negative impact of family governance greatly reduced when family-managed firms follow niche strategies. Further research might elucidate this puzzle. Tilburg, Netherlands

Jean-Francois Hennart

References Arregle, J., Duran, P. Hitt, M., & van Essen, P. (2017). Why is family firms’ internationalization unique? A meta-analysis. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 41(5), 801–831. Arregle, J., Hitt, M., & Mari, I. (2019). A missing link in family firms’ internationalization research: Family structures. Journal of International Business Studies, 50(5), 809–825. Arregle, J., Naldi, L., Nordquist, M., & Hitt., M. (2012). Internationalization of family-controlled firms: A study of the effects of external involvement in governance. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 36(6), 1115–1143. Banalieva, E., & Eddleston, K. (2011). Home regional focus and performance of family firms: The role of family vs. non-family leaders. Journal of International Business Studies, 42(8), 1060–1072. Bauweraerts, J., Sciascia, S., Naldi, L., & Mazzola, P. (2019). Family CEO and board service: Turning the tide for export scope in family SMEs. International Business Review, 28(5), 101583. Bhaumik, S., Driffield, N., & Pal, S. (2010). Does ownership structure of emerging market firms affect their outward FDI? The case of the Indian automotive and pharmaceutical sectors. Journal of International Business Studies, 41, 437–450. Berrone, P., Cruz, C., & Gomez-Mejia, L. (2012). Socioemotional wealth in family firms: Theoretical dimensions, assessment approaches, and agenda for future research. Family Business Review, 25(3), 258–279. Casillas, J., & Moreno-Menendez, A. (2017). International business and family business: Potential dialogue between disciplines. European Journal of Family Business, 7(1–2), 25–40. Claver, E., Rienda, L., & Quer, D. (2009). Family firm’s international commitment: The influence of family-related factors. Family Business Review, 22(2), 125–135. Coleman, J. (1990). Foundations of social theory. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Colli, A., Garcia-Canal, E., & Guillen, M. (2013). Family character and international entrepreneurship: A historical comparison of Italian and Spanish “new multinationals”. Business History, 55(1), 119–138.

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De Massis, A., Audretsch, D., Uhlaner, L., & Kammerlander, N. (2018). Innovation with limited resources: Management lessons from the German Mittelstand. Journal of Production and Innovation Management, 35(1), 125–146. Fang, H., Kotlar, J., Memili, E., Chrisman, J., & De Massis, A. (2018). The pursuit of international opportunities in family firms: Generational differences and the role of knowledge-based resources. Global Strategy Journal, 8(1), 136–157. Fernández, Z., & Nieto, M. (2013). Internationalization of family firms. In L. Melin, M.  Nordqvist, & P.  Sharma (Eds.), The Sage handbook of family business. Los Angeles: Sage. Fontevecchia, A. (2013). Illy’s espresso revolution: A luxury business model and the search for the perfect coffee. Forbes, December 10. Retrieved November 10, 2015, from http://www.forbes.com/sites/afontevecchia/2013/12/10/illys-­espresso-­ revolution-­a-­luxury-­business-­model-­and-­the-­search-­for-­the-­perfect-­coffee/ Gallo, M., Tapies, J., & Cappuyns, K. (2004). Comparison of family and non-family business: Financial logic and personal preferences. Family Business Review, 17(4), 303–318. Gomez-Mejia, L., Cruz, C., Berrone, P., & de Castro, J. (2011). The bind that ties: Socioemotional wealth preservation in family firms. Academy of Management Annals, 5(1), 653–707. Gomez-Mejia, L., Makri, M., & Larraza-Kintana, M. (2010). Diversification decisions in family-controlled firms. Journal of Management Studies, 47(2), 223–252. Graves, C., & Thomas, J. (2006). Internationalization of Australian family firms: A managerial capabilities perspective. Family Business Review, 19(3), 207–224. Hedd Magazine. (2018). Ride in style with Ciclotte—World first designer exercise bike. Retrieved September 4, 2020, from www.Heddmagazine.com/2018/11/02/ ciclotte-­designer-­exercise-­bike/ Hennart, J.  F. (2011). A theoretical assessment of the empirical literature on the impact of multinationality on performance. Global Strategy Journal, 1(1–2), 135–151. Hennart, J.  F. (2014). The accidental internationalists: A theory of born globals. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 38(1), 117–135. Hennart, J. F., Majocchi, A., & Forlani, E. (2019). The myth of the stay-at-home family firm: How family-managed SMEs can overcome their internationalization limitations. Journal of International Business Studies, 50(5), 758–782. Johanson, J., & Vahlne, J. E. (1977). Internationalization process of firm—A model of knowledge development and increasing foreign market commitments. Journal of International Business Studies, 8(1), 23–32. Johanson, J., & Vahlne, J. E. (2009). The Uppsala internationalization process model revisited: From liability of foreignness to liability of outsidership. Journal of International Business Studies, 40(3), 1411–1431. Kim, H., Hoskisson, R., & Zyung, J. (2019). Socioemotional favoritism: Evidence from foreign divestitures in family multinationals. Organization Studies, 40(6), 917–940.

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Kontinen, T., & Ojala, A. (2010). The internationalization of family business: A review of extant research. Journal of Family Business Strategy, 1(2), 97–107. Kontinen, T., & Ojala, A. (2012). Social capital in the international operations of family SMEs. Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development, 19(1), 39–55. Magnani, G., & Zucchella, A. (2019). Coping with uncertainty in the internationalisation strategy: An exploratory study on entrepreneurial firms. International Marketing Review, 36(1), 131–163. Merrilees, B., & Tiessen, J.  H. (1999). Building generalizable SME international marketing models using case studies. International Marketing Review, 16(4/5), 326–344. Miller, D., & Le Breton-Miller, I. (2005). Managing for the long run: Lessons in competitive advantage from great family businesses. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press. Muñoz-Bullon, F., & Sanchez-Bueno, M. (2012). So family ties shape the performance consequences of diversification? Evidence from the European Union. Journal of World Business, 47(3), 469–277. Pollak, R. (1985). A transaction cost approach to families and households. Journal of Economic Literature, 23(2), 581–608. Pukall T., & Calabrò, A. (2014). The internationalization of family firms: A critical review and integrative model. Family Business Review, 27(2), 103–125. Purkayastha, S., Manolova, T., & Edelman, L. (2018). Business group effects on the R&D intensity-internationalization relationship: Empirical evidence from India. Journal of World Business, 53(2), 104–117. Salvato, C., Chirico, F., Melin, L., & Seidl, D. (2019). Coupling family business research with organization studies: Interpretations, issues, and insights. Organization Studies, 40(6), 775–791. Sanchez-Bueno, M., & Usero, B. (2014). How may the nature of family firms explain the decisions concerning international diversification? Journal of Business Research, 67(7), 1311–1320. Simon, H. (2009). Hidden champions of the 21st century. Berlin: Springer. Simon, H. (2014). The global success of midsized companies. The German Times for Europe, May 30. Retrieved June 30, 2015, from http://www.german-­times.com/ index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=43501&Itemid=244 Singla, C., Veliyath, R., & George, R. (2014). Family firms and internationalization-­ governance relationships: Evidence of secondary agency issues. Strategic Management Journal, 35, 606–616. Tinbergen, J. (1962). Shaping the world economy. New York: Twentieth Century Fund. Toften, K., & Hammervoll, T. (2013). Niche marketing research: Status and challenges. Marketing Intelligence and Planning, 31(3), 272–285. Tsang, E. (2020). Family firm internationalization: An organizational learning perspective. Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 37, 205–225. Verbeke, A., & Forootan, Z. (2012). How good are Multinationality-Performance (M-P) empirical studies? Global Strategy Journal, 2, 332–344.

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Wang, C., Wei, Y., & Liu, X. (2010). Determinants of bilateral trade flows in OECD countries: Evidence from gravity panel data models. The World Economy, 33(7), 894–915. Xu, K., Hitt, M., & Dai, L. (2020). International diversification of family-dominant firms: Integrating socioemotional wealth and behavioral theory of the firm. Journal of World Business, 55(3), 101071. Zahra, S. (2003). International expansion of US manufacturing family businesses: The effect of ownership and involvement. Journal of Business Venturing, 18(4), 495–512.

Foreword 3

The Palgrave Handbook on Family Firm Internationalization by Tanja Leppäaho and Sarah Jack is the pleasing result of enthusiastic and tireless research done to advance our knowledge and understanding of family firm internationalization. Meeting Tanja and Sarah at the Centre for Family Business, Lancaster University Management School, allowed me to discover the passion Tanja adds to her work, and to see Sarah’s charisma in prompting research as a priority to advance knowledge creation and sharing. Their efforts have melded the work of the contributors into a useful and vital volume. Family business internationalization has received attention only in the last ten years, with scant earlier contributions. The literature reviews by Kontinen and Ojala (2010) and Pukall and Calabrò (2014) give full credit to this stream of literature, highlighting the importance of looking at this topic from novel perspectives. They consider how internationalization theories and models could be adapted and changed to better explain the behaviours of businesses run by families that look for opportunities abroad—opportunities outside their comfort zone. The family business context offers opportunity to challenge the assumptions of existing internationalization models, providing novel explanations to understand reasons, modes, and processes of international expansion. Over time, we have assisted in an increasing number of articles that look at this phenomenon, especially the special issues advancing our knowledge of family business internationalization (Baù, et al., 2017; De Massis et al., 2018; Eddleston et al., 2020). The handbook complements and advances the ongoing debates on family business internationalization by offering a rich and diverse set of contributions to crystallize the most up-to-date and challenging perspectives on the topic. The reader of the book will delve into four core areas of research: family xxxvii

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firm-specific view on internationalization; internationalization process, networks in family firm internationalization, and family firm internationalization from emerging markets. The contributions collected in this handbook are arranged in a way that highlights the idiosyncratic characteristics of family businesses and their role in advancing knowledge on internationalization. The first part of the book leverages on debated concepts and theoretical perspectives that have flourished in family business studies. The authors suggest that a decision such as internationalization is strongly dependent on affect-related dimensions: the prioritization of family assets and routines (bifurcation bias, cf. Kano, Verbeke, and Johnston—Chap. 1); intergenerational differences in the way the business is looked after (family stewards, cf. Ruenda, Claver, and Andreu—Chap. 2); paradoxical tensions in preserving the interests of the family in business, while building networks to expand the family business (socioemotional wealth, cf. Metsola, Torkkeli, Leppäaho, Arenius, and Haapanen—Chap. 3); as well as considerations about costs and resources from the family and the business perspective (integration of family and business, cf. Sestu—Chap. 4). The second part of the book embraces the view that internationalization is not considered as an event, rather as a process. Through this perspective, the reader has the opportunity to reflect on other three core features of family firms that make them focus differently on their businesses and the strategies employed abroad. Indeed, using a behavioural perspective, Kuiken, Naldi, and Nordqvist (Chap. 5) suggest family firms have to manage a discontinuous process in their international expansion. From a different angle and looking at the evolution of the family business into a multinational company, Laari-­ Salmela, Mainela, Pernu, and Puhakka (Chap. 6) show how family values can affect the management model of the family business subsidiaries in other countries. Moreover, underlying the salience of the founder’s social legacy for a family business, Korhonen, Leppäaho, Amdam, and Jack (Chap. 7) advance how family heritage is intertwined with networking activities, introducing and explaining the concept “international networking legacy”. The first two parts of the handbook on family firm-specific views and process views lead the reader to observe that there is a fil rouge across the contributions collected there, as networking emerges as a leitmotiv in several chapters. Accordingly, the third part of the book not surprisingly addresses this aspect of family firm internationalization. The authors of these contributions challenge the reader’s view on the topic. In Chap. 8, Kampouri and Plakoyiannaki offer insights on entry modes, suggesting that identification to the business and emotional attachment make family firms stick to their nodes in the international network they created in the first move. Embracing the

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notion of global value chair, in Chap. 9, Debellis and Rondi highlight how relational control, along with vertical integration, characterizes the networking activities of family businesses. Investigating foreign partner relationships, in Chap. 10, Jaakko clarifies how the existence of both economic and non-­ economic goals influence family firms’ behaviour with their partners, who are considered as an “extended international family”. In Chap. 11, San Román, Gil-López, Díez-Vial, and Jack advance how a family firm can learn working with international partners and, at the same time, leverage on family reputation and trust, reliability and long-term vision. Finally, concerning international networking behaviour of family firms, in Chap. 12, Batas, Guiderdoni-Jourdain, and Leppäaho discuss how different family structures leverage on inherited social capital, thus affecting their internationalization endeavours. The last section of the handbook tackles a growing theme, looking at family firm internationalization from emerging markets. The contributions in this section offer inspiring insights and learnings from family firms that move abroad by expanding their activities from developing and transition economies. Fuerst suggests the importance of networking activities of both family and non-family entrepreneurs in the internationalization process of a family business established in Colombia (Chap. 13). With a focus on the social network of migrant families, Centeno Caffarena and Discua Cruz discuss the relevance of social resources used by a German family in business in Nicaragua, leveraging in particular the ethnic group to overcome contextual challenges (Chap. 14). Jayakumar relies on the ability-willingness framework to discuss various internationalization pathways of small Indian family businesses (Chap. 15). Kalhor and Strandskov develop a conceptual model that offers an overview of institutional processes to access resources, focusing on informal and poor institutions, which legitimize operations abroad (Chap. 16). Finally, presenting a family SME in Guatemala, Godinez and Solís Sierra advance that, to develop an effective exporting strategy, a family business initially establishes a trustful relationship with an intermediary to enter the targeted foreign market (Chap. 17). Overall, these contributions broaden a very well-­ established North American and Western European perspective, embracing evidence from different contexts. I am confident that researchers, family business owners, and consultants likewise will find this handbook a vital source to understand family firm internationalization, and a trigger to foster new ideas, practices, and policies. Lancaster, UK

Giovanna Campopiano

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References Baù, M., Block, J. H., Discua Cruz, A., & Naldi, L. (2017). Locality and internationalization of family firms. Entrepreneurship & Regional Development, 29(5–6), 570–574. De Massis, A., Frattini, F., Majocchi, A., & Piscitello, L. (2018). Family firms in the global economy: Toward a deeper understanding of internationalization determinants, processes, and outcomes. Global Strategy Journal, 8(1), 3–21. Eddleston, K. A., Jaskiewicz, P., & Wright, M. (2020). Family firms and internationalization in the Asia-Pacific: The need for multi-level perspectives. Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 37, 345–361. Kontinen, T., & Ojala, A. (2010). The internationalization of family business: A review of extant research. Journal of Family Business Strategy, 1(2), 97–107. Pukall, T. J., & Calabrò, A. (2014). The internationalization of family firms: A critical review and integrative model. Family Business Review, 27(2), 103–125.

Foreword 4

In recent years, research on family firm internationalization has attracted increasing attention amongst both academics and practitioners. Recently, by working on an integrative literature review on the topic and examining four evolutionary waves of family firm internationalization research, I realized that although the seeds of this research were planted in the beginning of the 1990s, a clear understanding of the distinctive challenges connected with internationalization of family firms is far from being developed. What is more, we are still quite far from connecting international and family business theories, and this research area suffers from both theoretical limitations and empirical indeterminacy issues. Such issues unquestionably point to the pressing need of directing further attention to the how, the what, and the why of family firm internationalization. This timely handbook challenges existing knowledge on family firm internationalization and makes an important step forward in advancing our understanding of the distinctive features of internationalization in the family firm setting. Overall, the volume provides a clear and well-reasoned overview of the features making family firm internationalization unique, the processual aspects associated with internationalization in this distinctive organizational setting, original network and social capital perspectives that can enrich our understanding of family firm internationalization dynamics, and a number of timely aspects related to family firm internationalization from emerging markets. More specifically, the handbook offers a systematization of existing knowledge that is useful to understand the effect of family involvement in a business organization on its internationalization goals, decision-making processes, and behaviours. It goes even further by taking into account the role played by the xli

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family system in shaping international business behaviours through an in-­ depth examination of family dynamics that goes beyond a mere examination of the effect of family ownership and management. At the same time, the volume challenges the predominant focus on exports in the family firm internationalization literature by proposing a more variegated examination of international business activities. Overall, the different chapters organized in four sections shed light on a number of important topics, involving both established and emerging academics in this area. The two co-editors, Professor Tanja Leppäaho and Professor Sarah Jack, and the authors of the eighteen chapters discuss in a clear and comprehensive way the importance of taking a family business and social capital view on internationalization issues, and the volume offers important contributions to the existing body of knowledge on international issues of firms with family involvement—the most ubiquitous form of business organization in any world economy. It examines a particularly timely phenomenon from different perspectives by providing a multifaceted and fine-grained understanding of it, drawing on both mainstream theories and new, pioneering research streams that open new avenues for future research. I strongly recommend this reading to anyone interested in appreciating the role of family involvement in shaping a firm’s internationalization strategy and its ensuing management challenges, and to those scholars who are eager to know how considering the idiosyncrasies of family firms can influence their internationalization determinants, processes, and outcomes. The two co-­ editors have succeeded in the important task of disseminating the latest research insights to the benefit of a large community of stakeholders that extends well beyond the academic network. Lancaster, UK

Alfredo De Massis

Preface

The specific features of the growth and internationalization of family firms deserve specific attention (see Arregle et  al., 2019; Hennart et  al., 2019; Kontinen & Ojala, 2010; Metsola et al., 2020; Pukall & Calabro, 2014), not least during adverse economic times, such as the current coronavirus pandemic. The coronavirus crisis has put almost all firms under huge pressure due to governmental restrictions and changing customer behaviour. Nevertheless, it has been shown that family firms can sustain relatively profitable businesses during adverse economic climates (Dyer & Whetten, 2006; Sirmon & Hitt, 2003). Indeed, especially at this time, there may be increased appreciation of the stability and prolonged time horizons, survivability capital, strong social capital, and patient financial capital (Sirmon & Hitt, 2003) possessed by some family firms (Nordqvist & Jack, 2020). Family firms form the majority (about 80%) of all firms around the world, and some are major international players. They account for an enormous percentage of the employment, revenues, and GDP of national economies at a global level (EFB, 2012; Hennart et al., 2019; Shanker & Astrachan, 1996; Westhead & Cowling, 1998) but also at national and local levels (Gomez-­ Mejia, Haynes, Nunez-Nickel, Jacobson, & Moyano-Fuentes, 2007). All types of family firm internationalization strategies deserve attention, given that internationalization could well prove a requirement for survival rather than a choice, when domestic markets deteriorate or face considerable disruption (Georgiadou et al., 2020). For family firms, a quartile typically consists of a whole generation (25 years) rather than three months. Typically, there is a desire to pass the firm on to the next generation and to cherish the heritage of previous generations. The well-being of family members typically takes precedence over the success of xliii

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the business (Berrone, Cruz, & Gomez-Mejia, 2012; Gomez-Mejia et  al., 2007), with non-economic values being prioritized over economic returns (Verbeke et al., 2018). Family firms act as an engine of stability and long-term growth, and also as natural incubators of an entrepreneurial culture, fostering the next generation of entrepreneurs (EFB, 2012). We are delighted to have with us now the very first Palgrave Handbook on Family Firm Internationalization. Family firms have been close to our hearts ever since we started to be interested in entrepreneurship and began our research careers in academia. This book is the outcome of our view that family firm internationalization is different from the internationalization of other types of firm (see e.g. Arregle et al., 2019; DeMassis et al., 2018) to the extent that it deserves a book of its own. The present book is focused around topics that existing reviews (see Arregle et al., 2019; Debellis et al., 2020; Hennart et al., 2019; Kontinen & Ojala, 2010; Metsola et al., 2020; Pukall & Calabro, 2014) have also regarded as deserving more attention, in order to take the field forward. These have touched on (1) family firm-specific views (e.g. Kontinen & Ojala, 2010; Pukall & Calabro, 2014), (2) the process nature of internationalization (see Metsola et  al., 2020  in particular), (3) the role of networks in the internationalization of family firms (see Kampouri et  al., 2017; Kontinen & Ojala, 2010), and (4) the internationalization of family firms located in emerging economies (see especially Leppäaho et  al., 2016; Metsola et al., 2020). Part I of the book on family firm-specific views starts with the insightful study (Chap. 1) of Kano et  al., discussing how the prioritization of family assets and routines (i.e. bifurcation bias) creates affect-based governance practices that may clash with rational economic considerations in guiding international strategy. Rienda et  al. (Chap. 2) use the stewardship lens to discuss intergenerational differences in the way the business is looked after. They conclude that later generations seem to opt for non-control entry modes. In Chap. 3––which is based on the only “home-grown” theory of family business research field to date, that is, socioemotional wealth (SEW)––Metsola et al. tackle the paradoxical tensions that occur in preserving the interests of the family in business, while building networks to expand the family business. They found that emotional decision-making has a strong negative relationship, and networking has a strong positive relationship with the degree of internationalization. In Chap. 4, Sestu provides an integrative framework on how family firms choose between different entry modes, examining the integration of family and business aspects. Part II of the book discusses the internationalization process. On a general level, recent academic, public, and political discourses have focused strongly

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on high-growth and rapidly internationalizing firms. Some family firms do indeed fall into this category (see Hennart et al., 2019; Kontinen & Ojala, 20102; Kontinen, 2014), but most do not (see Kontinen & Ojala, 2010; Pukall & Calabro, 2014). The emphasis on high growth is unsurprising, given that the goals (and most often the realities) of national economic wealth have been based on constantly increasing or stable growth rates. However, there has been a tendency to overlook the fundamental economic role played by firms that have grown more slowly over many years—of which family firms form the largest cohort. Generally speaking, family firms are regarded as slow to internationalize, in the manner portrayed in the Uppsala model (see e.g. Kontinen & Ojala, 2010; Pukall & Calabro, 2014). However, some have been shown to follow a born-global or born-again global approach to internationalization (Kontinen & Ojala, 2012; Kontinen, 2014). These typically represent a global niche strategy (Hennart, 2014; Hennart et  al., 2019) rather than provision of a mass-market commodity. The chapters in this book shed new light on the internationalization process, for example, by discussing the discontinuous nature of the internationalization process, the development of a network in a transitional incumbent–successor context, and how family values shape the development of the family firm into a multinational company. In Chap. 5, applying a behavioural perspective, Kuiken et al. suggest that rather than a continuous process, internationalization is often in reality a discontinuous process in which firms internationalize, de-internationalize, and, potentially, re-internationalize. This is an important aspect, given the longitudinal time horizons and changing context that family firms have to deal with and live through. Chapter 6 by Laari-Salmela et al. discusses the evolution of a family business into a multinational company, showing how family values can affect the management model of the family business subsidiaries in other countries. For their part, Korhonen et al. (Chap. 7) apply two longitudinal case histories to show how, within a transitional incumbent–successor context, the founderentrepreneurs’ domestic and international identity-based and calculative ties emerged and further evolved within and across country borders. They demonstrate how the family heritage is intertwined with networking activities, and they introduce and explain the concept of an “international networking legacy”. Part III of the book focuses on networks in family firm internationalization. Family firms rely on a complex web of family and professional relationships in their internationalization and may indeed possess particularly long-lasting network ties. In-depth understandings of such webs are still nascent (Ciravegna et al., 2019; Kampouri et al., 2017; Kontinen & Ojala, 2010, 2012; Pukall & Calàbro, 2014). Nevertheless, this book offers several new approaches to the

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understanding of international networking among family firms and does much to expand knowledge and understanding of the topic. In Chap. 8, Kampouri and Plakoyiannaki suggest that identification with the business and emotional attachment causes family firms to stick to familiar nodes within the international network that they created in their initial move. Chapter 9 by Debellis and Rondi discusses the distinctive characteristics of family firms in the global value chain, suggesting that family firms foster vertical integration—limiting outsourcing to those activities that are difficult or impossible to internalize (e.g. due to lack of raw materials)—and relational control. Metsola (Chap. 10) examines the foreign partner relationships of family firms via the lens of SEW, concluding that firms with higher levels of SEW are more active in building close foreign partner relationships; this suggests that family firms with high levels of SEW build an “extended international family”. Chapter 11 by San Román et al. draws on a historical longitudinal case. It elaborates how the efforts of a family firm to embed itself as a trustworthy partner for foreign partners can lead to domestic and international growth, despite a constrained domestic market. Chapter 12 by Batas et al. explores how family firms with a range of inherited family structures and values networked to internationalize. It appears that the Taiwanese case in the study based its international networking decisions on tradition and security, while the Finnish and French cases based their decisions on conformity, related to the protection of family members. Part IV of the book includes five studies in the emerging markets context, noting how these deserve increased attention in research on family firm internationalization. Fuerst (Chap. 13) presents a case from Colombia, encompassing international networking. It shows us how a family member together with a non-family member built a base for internationalization, thus revealing micro-processes in long-term international networking. Centeno-Caffarena and Discua Cruz (Chap. 14) report on a family firm in agribusiness, owned and managed by a family of German migrants in Nicaragua. They demonstrate the power of social capital and ethnic networks in helping migrant families to internationalize their family business. In so doing, the authors also reveal how contextual challenges can foster an early and continued reliance on ethnic networks in efforts to internationalize. Jayakumar (Chap. 15) explores eight small Indian family firms. She presents an integrated model of small family-firm internationalization in fast-­ growing emerging economies, bringing together environmental, state, and change variables, plus family factors, to show how these influence the family firm’s ability and willingness to internationalize. Kalhor and Strandskov

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(Chap. 16) focus on informal and weak institutions; they develop a conceptual model which encompasses how a family firm, faced with strong host-­ country push and specific family factors, may reverse its internationalization journey. Last, but not least, through their coffee-exporting family firm case from Guatemala, Godinez and Solís Sierra (Chap. 17) advance understanding of how a family firm may develop an effective exporting strategy. They show how a family firm initially established a trustful relationship within its domestic borders, endeavouring to discover whether it could establish a trust-based working relationship with an intermediary in the foreign market. This was followed by the firm exporting on its own, with the family firm leveraging its family structure to exploit its experiential resources. We would not have been able to provide such an insightful outcome without the dedicated work by the distinguished authors of our four forewords, and the authors of all the 17 chapters. The material as a whole offers conceptual advancement, archival longitudinal studies, statistical regressions, and multiple and single case studies, drawing on data from Northern and Southern Europe, with cases also from India, and from countries in Asia and South America. We believe that the forewords and individual chapters provide several fruitful research directions, and we would warmly recommend you to read these thoughtful works in full. However, we would briefly like to offer some further ideas for future investigations. Firstly, we would like to emphasize the need to study family firm heterogeneity (see also Arregle et al., 2017; 2019; De Massis et al., 2018; Hennart et al., 2019; Hughes et al., 2018; Metsola et al., 2020; Verbeke et  al., 2018) to enhance theorization in the field. The field would benefit from additional perspectives on ownership, management, and continuity (see Gersick et al., 1997) to determine how different combinations of ownership, control, and management, plus the desire to pass the firm from one generation to the next generation, are manifested in internationalization strategies. Family firms do indeed differ from non-family firms in the aspect of unification of ownership and control (Carney, 2005). Nevertheless, the management of family-owned firms varies greatly. Some family firms are owned by family members, but not managed by them; some are owned and managed by family members, but with no desire for continuity to the next generation; others are owned and managed by family members, with the strong pursuit of continuity. In line with the foreword by Hennart, the transgenerational intent is also related to longer time horizons. Firms with family ownership, but with no family management or desire for transgenerational succession, may behave more like non-family firms than do those which are both family-owned and managed.

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Secondly, and related to the above, the study of internationalization processes could be more directed to explaining the heterogeneity of the internationalization processes among family firms, and with more investigation of the continuity/discontinuity aspects of the internationalization process over time. As discussed by Kuiken et al. in Chap. 5 of this book, a typical longitudinal process will include entries, exits, re-entries, increases/decreases in the range of activities and networks, and so on. Furthermore, we need elaboration on how and why a family firm can be a born-global firm (Kontinen, 2014), a born-again global firm (Graves & Thomas, 2008; Kontinen & Ojala, 2012), a global niche player with a significant international presence (Hennart et al., 2019), or a traditional slow growing enterprise (following the Uppsala model). Studies along these lines will increase our understanding of the heterogeneity of family firms in their internationalization strategies and the reasons behind them. Thirdly, we see considerable potential in contextualizing family firm internationalization research (see e.g. Delios, 2017; Michailova, 2011; Leppäaho, Chetty, & Dimitratos, 2018). Changing historical contexts and situational sensitivities should be an integral element in the analyses of internationalization, with the activities of both individuals and firms viewed as evolving in parallel with the context (Cantwell et al., 2010). Family firms with long historical backgrounds through different times provide excellent potential for this type of theorization, as indicated by the longitudinal analyses of Korhonen et al. (Chap. 7) and San Roman et al. (Chap. 11). The contexts of developed and developing economies offer family firm cases with a range of background features, including notably the starting point. Taken together, these features have the potential to enrich theory and to provide new openings for conceptual development. Fourthly, an in-depth understanding of the network view could offer even more insights on the specific features of family firm internationalization, including the ways in which firms tend to nurture their network carefully, and, having done so, pass it on to the next generation. Chapters 6, 7, 11, 12, and 13 in this book offer views on transgenerational networks, collaborative partnering networks, family values in a growing international network, and the micro-processes of international networking. They provide excellent examples of the stepping stones involved with this perspective. Future research could well encompass the role of immigrant networks in aiding internationalization (see Chap. 14), the role of domestic partners in testing and initiating the market (see Chap. 17), and collaboration with non-family partners (see Chap. 13). Neither should one overlook the strength of multi-country data

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sets, in which the different cultural and institutional origins of family firms can give rise to theorization (see Chap. 12). Lappeenranta, Finland Stockholm, Sweden 

Tanja Leppäaho Sarah Jack

References Arregle, J., Duran, P. Hitt, M., & van Essen, P. (2017). Why is family firms’ internationalization unique? A meta-analysis. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 41(5), 801–831. Arregle, J. L., Hitt, M. A., & Mari, I. A. (2019). A missing link in family firms’ internationalization research: Family structure. Journal of International Business Studies, 50(5), 809–825. Berrone, P., Cruz, C., & Gomez-Mejia, L. R. (2012). Socioemotional wealth in family firms: Theoretical dimensions, assessment approaches, and agenda for future research. Family Business Review, 25(3), 258–279. Ciravegna, L., Kano, L., Rattalino, F., & Verbeke, A. (2019). Corporate diplomacy and family firm longevity. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 44. Debellis, F., Rondi, E., Plakoyiannaki, E., & De Massis, A. (2020). Riding the waves of family firm internationalization: A systematic literature review, integrative framework, and research agenda. Journal of World Business. Delios, A. (2017). The death and rebirth (?) of international business research. Journal of Management Studies, 54(3), 391–397. De Massis, A., Frattini, F., Majocchi, A., & Piscitello, L. (2018). Family firms in the global economy: Toward a deeper understanding of internationalization determinants, processes, and outcomes. Global Strategy Journal, 8(1), 3–21. Georgiadou, E., Hughes, M., & Viala, C. (2020). Commercial diplomacy as a mechanism for passive-reactive SME internationalization: Overcoming liabilities of outsidership. European Journal of International Management, in press. https://doi. org/10.1504/EJIM.2021.10029764 Gersick, K. E., Davis, J. A., Hampton, M. M., & Lansberg, I. (1997). Generation to generation: Life cycles of the family business. Harvard Business Press. Dyer, W. G., Jr., & Whetten, D. A. (2006). Family firms and social responsibility: Preliminary evidence from the S&P 500. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 30(6), 785–802. Gómez-Mejía, L. R., Haynes, K. T., Núñez-Nickel, M., Jacobson, K. J., & Moyano-­ Fuentes, J. (2007). Socioemotional wealth and business risks in family-controlled firms: Evidence from Spanish olive oil mills. Administrative Science Quarterly, 52(1), 106–137.

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Graves, C., & Thomas, J. (2008). Determinants of the internationalization pathways of family firms: An examination of family influence. Family Business Review, 21(2), 151–167. Hennart, J.  F. (2014). The accidental internationalists: A theory of born globals. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 38(1), 117–135. Hennart, J. F., Majocchi, A., & Forlani, E. (2019). The myth of the stay-at-home family firm: How family-managed SMEs can overcome their internationalization limitations. Journal of International Business Studies, 50, 758–782. Hughes, M., Filser, M., Harms, R., Kraus, S., Chang, M. L., & Cheng, C. F. (2018). Family firm configurations for high performance: The role of entrepreneurship and ambidexterity. British Journal of Management, 29, 595–612. Jack, S., & Nordqvist, M. (2020). The Wallenberg family of Sweden—Sustainable business development since 1856. In P. Sharma & S. Sharma (Eds.), Pioneering sustainable family firms’ patient capital strategies. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing Inc. [Forthcoming]. Kampouri, K., Plakoyiannaki, E., & Leppäaho, T. (2017). Family business internationalization and networks: Emerging pathways. Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing, 32, 357–370. Kano, L., & Verbeke, A. (2018). Family firm internationalization: Heritage assets and the impact of bifurcation bias. Global Strategy Journal, 8, 158–183. Kontinen, T. (2014). Biohit: A global, family–owned company embarking on a new phase. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 38(1), 185–207. Kontinen, T., & Ojala, A. (2012). Social capital in the international operations of family SMEs. Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development, 19. Kontinen, T., & Ojala, A. (2010). The internationalization of family businesses: A review of extant research. Journal of Family Business Strategy, 1, 97–107. Leppäaho, T., Chetty, S., & Dimitratos, P. (2018). Network embeddedness in the internationalization of biotechnology entrepreneurs. Entrepreneurship & Regional Development, 30(5–6), 562–584. Leppäaho, T., Plakoyiannaki, E., & Dimitratos, P. (2016). The case study in family business: An analysis of current research practices and recommendations. Family Business Review, 29(2), 159–173. Metsola, J., Leppäaho, T., Paavilainen-Mäntymäki, E., & Plakoyiannaki, E. (2020). Process in family business internationalisation: The state of the art and ways forward. International Business Review, 29(2), 101665. Michailova, S. (2011). Contextualizing in international business research: Why do we need more of it and how can we be better at it? Scandinavian Journal of Management, 27(1), 129–139. Pukall, T. J.,& Calabrò, A. (2014). The internationalization of family firms: A critical review and integrative model. Family Business Review, 27, 103–125. Shanker, M. C., & Astrachan, J. H. (1996). Myths and realities: Family businesses’ contribution to the US economy—A framework for assessing family business statistics. Family Business Review, 9(2), 107–123.

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Sirmon, D. G., & Hitt, M. A. (2003). Managing resources: Linking unique resources, management, and wealth creation in family firms. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 27(4), 339–358. Verbeke, A., Yuan, W., & Kano, L. (2018). A values-based analysis of bifurcation bias and its impact on family firm internationalization. Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 1–29.

Acknowledgements

We want to cordially thank the financial assistance by the Academy of Finland (grant number 308667, 434 485 EUR, 1.1.2017-31.7.2022) and Foundation for Economic Education. We want to cordially thank all the contributors of this book, including the authors of the forewords. Thank you so much for taking the field forward. Second, we send our warmest thanks to all the anonymous reviewers of the Handbook. Without your dedicated and detailed work, we would not have been able to develop the message of the chapters to where they are now.

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Contents

Part I Family Firm-Specific Views and Internationalization   1 1 Internationalization  Decisions in Family Firms: The Impact of Bifurcation Bias  3 Liena Kano, Alain Verbeke, and Andrew Johnston 2 Internationalisation  and Family Involvement: A Stewardship Approach in the Hotel Industry 37 Laura Rienda, Enrique Claver, and Rosario Andreu 3 Socioemotional  Wealth and Networking in the Internationalisation of Family SMEs 63 Jaakko Metsola, Lasse Torkkeli, Tanja Leppäaho, Pia Arenius, and Mika Haapanen 4 An  Integrative Framework of Family Firms and Foreign Entry Strategies103 Maria Cristina Sestu Part II Internationalization Process of Family Firms 133 5 Internationalization  of Family Firms as a Discontinuous Process: The Role of Behavioral Theory135 Andrea Kuiken, Lucia Naldi, and Mattias Nordqvist

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6 One  Family Firm, Four Families: Developing Management Models of a Family Values-Based MNC173 Sari Laari-Salmela, Tuija Mainela, Elina Pernu, and Vesa Puhakka 7 The  “Unwritten Will” in Interpersonal Network Ties: Founder Legacy and International Networking of Family Firms in History199 Satu Korhonen, Tanja Leppäaho, Rolv Petter Amdam, and Sarah Jack Part III Networks in Family Firm Internationalization 235 8 Entry  Nodes in Foreign Market Entry and Post-Entry Operations of Family-­Managed Firms237 Katerina Kampouri and Emmanuella Plakoyiannaki 9 How  Do Family Firms Orchestrate Their Global Value Chain?265 Francesco Debellis and Emanuela Rondi 10 Coexistence  of Economic and Noneconomic Goals in Building Foreign Partner Relationships: Evidence from Small Finnish Family Firms289 Jaakko Metsola 11 Networking  from Home to Abroad: The Internationalization of The Iberostar Group327 Elena San Román, Agueda Gil-López, Isabel Díez-Vial, and Sarah Jack 12 Social  Capital and Values in the Internationalization of Family Firms: A Multi-Country Study361 Spiros Batas, Karine Guiderdoni-Jourdain, and Tanja Leppäaho

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Part IV Family Firm Internationalization from Emerging Markets  393 13 The  Network Dynamics During Internationalization of a Family Firm: The Case of a New Venture from Colombia395 Sascha Fuerst 14 Internationalisation  of a Migrant Family Firm and Contextual Uncertainty: The Role of Ethnic Social Networks431 Leonardo Centeno-Caffarena and Allan Discua Cruz 15 Internationalization  of Small Indian Family-Firms: An Emergent Theory461 Tulsi Jayakumar 16 Family  Firms’ Internationalization: The Importance of Home Country Institutions519 Elham Kalhor and Jesper Strandskov 17 Internationalization  Process of Developing-Country Family SMEs: The Case of Solanos Hermanos S.A. of Guatemala553 Jose Godinez and José Solís Sierra I ndex571

Notes on Contributors

Rolv  Petter  Amdam is Professor of Business History at BI Norwegian Business School. His main research interests are internationalization processes of MNEs in general and business schools in particular. He has been the Alfred D. Chandler Jr. Visiting Scholar in International Business History at Harvard Business School and SCANCOR fellow at the Weatherhead Center of International Affairs, Harvard. In addition to several books within business history, his articles have appeared in journals such as Business History, Business History Review, Management & Organizational History, Academy of Management Executives, and Journal of World Business. Rosario Andreu  is Associate Professor of Management at the University of Alicante. She holds a PhD from the University of Alicante. Her primary research interests are focused on the internationalization of hotels and tourism firms. Her research articles have appeared in journals such as International Business Review, International Journal of Hospitality Management, Current Issues in Tourism, International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, and Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Management. Pia  Arenius is Professor of Entrepreneurship and Innovation at RMIT University, Australia. Her research interests include nascent entrepreneurs, emotion, self-regulation, and opportunity processes. Arenius has worked in various roles in universities in Finland, Switzerland, USA, and Australia for the past 25 years. Her research has been published in highly ranked journals including Journal of Business Venturing, Small Business Economics, Research Policy, and International Small Business Journal. She serves on the editorial review board of Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice.

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Spiros  Batas  is Senior Lecturer in International Business at University of Greenwich, London, UK. He holds his PhD in International Business and Strategy from University of Edinburgh and was examined by Professor Jan Johanson of Uppsala University. He is a member of the AIB-UKI Executive Board. He has worked as a consultant for Edinburgh World Heritage (EWH) where he led a project related to the valuation of Edinburgh’s World Heritage Site in economic terms. His research interests include social capital, family firms, international new ventures, and institutional logics. Leonardo Centeno-Caffarena  is a researcher and director of the Centre for the Promotion and Development of the Family Business (CEPRODEF) in Nicaragua. He holds a PhD and his articles have appeared in Entrepreneurship & Regional Development, Cross Cultural & Strategic Management, and in Sociedad y Utopía and has also published book chapters on family business and entrepreneurship. His research interests focus on families in business, corporate governance, and institutions. Enrique Claver  is Professor of Management and Strategic Management at the University of Alicante, Spain. He holds a PhD in Business and Economics. His doctoral dissertation focused on corporate social responsibility, but his primary areas of research cover tourism management and strategic management also. Likewise, he is member of the Tourism Research Institute at UA. He is the author of several books, book chapters, and international articles related to strategic, tourism, and human resource management. Francesco Debellis  is postdoctoral researcher and the chair of International Business at the University of Vienna, Austria. Prior to joining Vienna, Francesco has been a research associate at the Centre for Family Business Management of the Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy. He has been working as business consultant of several SMEs, and he has also earned research experience as a visiting scholar at the University of Leeds, UK, Witten Institute for Family Businesses, Germany, Henley Business School, UK, Old Dominion University, USA, and Zhejiang University, China. His research focuses on governance and internationalization of family firms. His articles have appeared, among others, in the Journal of World Business and Journal of International Management. Isabel  Díez-Vial is Associate Professor of Business Administration at Complutense University of Madrid where she co-coordinates the research group “Growth strategies”. Her research topics are clusters, science parks, and networks. Her articles have appeared in Journal of Management Studies,

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Technovation, Journal of Knowledge Management, Journal of Small Business Management, The Journal of Technology Transfer, among others. Allan Discua Cruz  is a senior lecturer at the Entrepreneurship and Strategy Department (ENST) in Lancaster University Management School. He is a founding member of the Centre for Family Business and a member of the Pentland Centre for Sustainability in Business. He holds a PhD and his articles have appeared in journals such as Organization & Environment, Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, Journal of Business Ethics, Entrepreneurship & Regional Development, Business History, Cross Cultural & Strategic Management, Journal of Family Business Strategy, and International Small Business Journal and has also published in book compilations. His research focuses on sustainable family enterprises as well as internationalization of family businesses. Sascha Fuerst  is Research Professor of Entrepreneurship and Innovation at EGADE Business School, Tecnologico de Monterrey, Mexico. He also holds an affiliation as researcher in international entrepreneurship with Turku School of Economics at the University of Turku, Finland. He holds a PhD in International Business with distinction from the Turku School of Economics. His research interest is focused on the intersection of entrepreneurship, innovation, and international business, and particularly entrepreneurial internationalization from a process perspective. Águeda  Gil-López is Assistant Professor of Economics at Universidad Francisco de Vitoria, Madrid, Spain. She holds a PhD in Economics from Universidad Complutense de Madrid, with a European mention, and was awarded with the Complutense Extraordinary PhD Prize of Economics in 2018. Her research interests include business history, family business, and entrepreneurship. She belongs to the research team of a competitive project funded by the Spanish Ministry of Education. Jose Godinez  is Assistant Professor of Management at the Robert J. Manning School of Business, University of Massachusetts Lowell. His work lays at the intersection of the strategy, international business, entrepreneurship, and business ethics disciplines, and he focuses on strategies for firms to operate ethically in locations characterized by high corruption levels. He holds a PhD from the University of Edinburgh Business School, and his article has appeared in journals such as International Business Review, Journal of Business Ethics, and Business and Politics.

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Notes on Contributors

Karine Guiderdoni-Jourdain  is Assistant Professor of Management Science in Aix-Marseille University, France. She is affiliated to the Institute of Labor Economics and Industrial Sociology (LEST-CNRS 7317). She is leading research on international support services for SME and on the internationalization of family-managed SME through a network perspective and in a multi-country cross-cultural approach. She has also led projects on pedagogical innovations, especially on the use of serious games in management courses for students. Mika  Haapanen is Associate Professor of Economics at University of Jyväskylä, Finland. His primary research interests include economics of education, regional economics, and labour economics. He has written empirical research papers, for example, about returns to education and labour migration. His article has appeared in Oxford Economic Papers, Labour Economics, Regional Studies, Journal of Regional Science, Journal of Development Studies, among others. He is an associate editor for the journal Regional Studies, Regional Science. Sarah Jack  is the Jacob and Marcus Wallenberg Professor of Innovative and Sustainable Business Development at the House of Innovation, Stockholm School of Economics, and Professor of Entrepreneurship at Lancaster University Management School. Her primary research interests relate to the social dimensions of entrepreneurship, where she draws on social capital and social network theory to extend understanding using qualitative method. Her articles have appeared in Journal of Management Studies, Academy of Management Learning and Education, Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, and Journal of Business Venturing. Tulsi  Jayakumar is Professor of Economics and Chairperson, Family Managed Business, at Bhavans S.P. Jain Institute of Management and Research (SPJIMR), Mumbai. Her research spans across areas of economics and family business. Other than articles in prestigious peer-reviewed journals, her cases have consistently been acclaimed as ‘Global Best-Selling’ and ‘Most Popular’ cases on global case repositories, Harvard and Ivey. She writes extensively in the media and is recognized as a thought leader in her chosen areas. She works closely with Indian family businesses and is also a member of Indian industrial bodies, where she acts as a voice for the SMEs. Andrew Johnston  is a PhD student and research assistant at the Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary. He holds an MBA from the University of Calgary, an MSc in Comparative Politics from the London School of Economics, and a BA(Hons) in Social Sciences from Leeds Beckett

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University. In addition to theories of family firm internationalization, Johnston’s research interests also focus on transactions between resource extraction firms, government regulators, and Indigenous groups. Elham  Kalhor  is a PhD research fellow in international businesses and entrepreneurship in the Department of Marketing and Management at the University of Southern Denmark. Her research area is family businesses and, in particular, the effects of institutional environments on the internationalization process in family firms. Her investigations have been accepted to be presented in international conferences such as the Academy of International Business (AIB) 2020, European Academy of Management (Euram) 2019, and Babson Conference (2018). Her articles have appeared in the European Journal of International Management (EJIM) and Sinergie Italian Journal of Management. Katerina  Kampouri is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Macedonia, Greece, and business consultant for Greek small and medium enterprises. She holds a PhD from the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece. Her research interests focus on family firm internationalization, partner selection, and emotion research. Her research appears in peer-reviewed academic journals, scientific volumes, and various conference proceedings. Liena  Kano  is Associate Professor of Strategy and Global Management at the Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary, Canada. Her research interests lie at the intersection of strategic management, international business, and entrepreneurship, with a particular focus on novel applications of internalization theory, and on microfoundations that underlie complex international governance decisions. Her article has appeared in top academic journals such as the Journal of International Business Studies, Journal of World Business, Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, among others. Satu  Korhonen is a Finnish scholar and holds a PhD in Business and Economics from Lappeenranta-Lahti University of Technology, Finland, where she also works as a researcher. Her primary research interests comprehend the individuals in and social dimensions of entrepreneurship and internationalization of small firms. Her methodological interests reside in qualitative process research and especially in the narrative enquiry. In addition to her involvement in family firm research over the recent years, she has about a decade of experience as a board member of her father’s industrial management consulting business.

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Notes on Contributors

Andrea  Kuiken  is a lecturer at the Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Groningen, the Netherlands. She holds a PhD in Business Administration from Jönköping International Business School, Sweden. Her research interests are in the areas of internationalization process, de-­ internationalization, SME internationalization, and family ownership. Sari  Laari-Salmela is an associate professor at the University of Oulu Business School. Her interests are in the areas of strategy and organization studies, information systems, and industrial networks, and her articles have appeared in reputed international journals including Industrial Marketing Management, Journal of Business Ethics, and Journal of Strategic Information Systems. She has over ten years of work experience in an international family firm. Tanja  Leppäaho (previously Kontinen) works as Professor of Growth Entrepreneurship and Academy of Finland Research Fellow at LUT University, Finland. Her research focuses on internationalization of family firms and SMEs, networking, social capital, and qualitative research. Her articles have appeared in Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, Family Business Review, Entrepreneurship and Regional Development, and International Business Review, among others. She is also closely involved with business practice through her Academy of Finland-funded research project on the internationalization of family firms (see http://ife.fi). Tuija  Mainela  is Professor of International Business at the University of Oulu Business School, Finland. Her research interests include international entrepreneurship, internationalization of firms, international opportunity development, and dynamics of business networks. She leads a research project focused on innovation and change in health care sector. Her articles have appeared in reputed journals, such as Journal of Business Venturing and Industrial Marketing Management, and has contributed to several books as an author of chapters. Jaakko Metsola  works as a postdoctoral researcher at the School of Business and Management at LUT University, Lappeenranta, Finland. His primary research interests include internationalization and international marketing of family SMEs. Lucia  Naldi is Professor of Business Administration at Jönköping International Business School and Vice President for Research at Jönköping University. She holds a PhD from JIBS and an MSc from the University of Florence. Her main research and teaching are in the areas of entrepreneurship,

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international business, and strategy. Her research focuses on growth and internationalization of small and young firms. She is also interested in entrepreneurship in different contexts, including family firms and firms located in rural areas. Naldi’s research has been published in several journals and as book chapters. Naldi is affiliated with the Centre for Family Entrepreneurship and Ownership (CeFEO) and the Centre for Entrepreneurship and Spatial Economics (CEnSE). Mattias  Nordqvist is Professor of Entrepreneurship at the House of Innovation at Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden. He is also Professor of Business Administration and affiliated with the Center for Family Entrepreneurship and Ownership (CeFEO) at Jönköping International Business School, Jönköping University, Sweden. Elina Pernu  holds a PhD in Marketing from the University of Oulu Business School, Finland. Her main research interests include multinational corporations, internal networks, sense-making in organizations, key account management, and global customer relationships. Her research has appeared in academic journals, such as Industrial Marketing Management and Advances in International Management. Emmanuella  Plakoyiannaki is Chair of International Business at the University of Vienna, Austria, and a visiting professor at Leeds University Business School, UK. She serves as an associate editor in the British Journal of Management. Her expertise lies in the areas of SMEs and family firm internationalization and qualitative research. Her articles have appeared in various academic outlets including the Academy of Management Review, Journal of International Business Studies, Journal of Management Studies, and Journal of World Business. Vesa Puhakka  is Professor of Management and Organization and Head of Department of Marketing, Management and International Business at the University of Oulu Business School, Finland. His research interests include international entrepreneurship, opportunity creation, and entrepreneurial leadership, and he leads the Center for Entrepreneurship and Sustainable Business. His articles have appeared in reputed journals, such as Journal of Business Venturing and Industrial Marketing Management and has contributed to several books as an author of chapters. Laura  Rienda  is Associate Professor of Management at the University of Alicante, and her research interest is related to family businesses, international strategy, and emerging markets. She holds a PhD from the University of

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Alicante and her articles have appeared in different journals such as Family Business Review, Asia Pacific Journal of Management, Management Decision, International Journal of Hospitality Management, and Current Issues in Tourism. Elena San Román  is Associate Professor of Economic History at Complutense University of Madrid, Spain and an associate member of the Spanish Royal Academy of History. Her research interests are focused on business history, family business, entrepreneurship, and international business in the twentieth century. She is the co-principal researcher of a competitive research project funded by the Spanish Ministry of Education, focused on the study of collective entrepreneurship and innovation in the Spanish service industry. Emanuela Rondi  is Assistant Professor at the Department of Management of the Università degli Studi di Bergamo (Italy). She holds a PhD in Management (2016) from Lancaster University (UK) and was research member of the Center for Family Business Management of the Free University of Bozen-Bolzano (Italy). Her research lies at the intersection of family business and social networks, with a specific interest on the role that family relationships exerts on succession, innovation, and internationalization. Her research articles have appeared in leading academic journals as Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, Journal of Management, Journal of Management Studies and Journal of World Business. Maria Cristina Sestu  is an assistant professor at the University of Groningen. She holds a PhD (Doctor Europaeus) in Economics and Management from the University of Padua in 2017. She was a visiting scholar at the Université Jean Moulin Lyon3 and Sussex University. Her research interests are in international business, entry modes, family firms, and SMEs. José Solís Sierra  is Director of Finance and Corporate Compliance master’s programme at UVG Masters at Universidad de Valle de Guatemala and Professor of Finance at the same institution. He holds an MSc from EADA Business School, and his research interests include business ethics and behavioural finance in emerging economies. Recently, he participated as the main author for Guatemala in the first Latin-American study Status of Business AntiBribery Practices; First Latin American Study in collaboration with Principles for Responsible Management Education (PRME), a United Nationssupported initiative founded in 2007. Jesper  Strandskov  is Emeritus Professor of International Business at the Department of Marketing and Management, University of Southern Denmark. His research interests include firm internationalization, business

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development, corporate governance, and business history. His articles have appeared in academic journals such as International Business Review, Business History, Scandinavian Journal of Economic History Research, Journal of Global Marketing, and Academy of Management Review. Lasse  Torkkeli is an associate professor at the School of Business and Management at LUT University at Lappeenranta, Finland. He is also Adjunct Professor of International Business in the Turku School of Economics at the University of Turku. Torkkeli’s research interests are in the international entrepreneurship and international business domains, and include SME internationalization, business networks and capabilities, and sustainable entrepreneurship. Alain Verbeke  is Professor of International Business and the McCaig Chair in Management at the Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary. He is also the Inaugural Alan M. Rugman Memorial Fellow at the Henley Business School, University of Reading, and editor-in-chief of the Journal of International Business Studies. He is an adjunct professor at the Solvay Business School, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, and a Dean’s Circle Distinguished Fellow at Florida International University. He was elected a fellow of the AIB (2007) and EIBA (2019). His research agenda focuses on the strategic management of MNEs, and on effective governance design for managing new resource combinations internationally.

List of Figures

Fig. 1.1 Fig. 2.1 Fig. 4.1 Fig. 4.2 Fig. 6.1 Fig. 7.1 Fig. 7.2 Fig. 8.1 Fig. 8.2 Fig. 8.3 Fig. 8.4 Fig. 10.1 Fig. 10.2

Fig. 10.3 Fig. 10.4 Fig. 11.1

International governance decisions and outcomes in family firms 7 Family involvement and internationalisation 46 Entry modes and family firms’ characteristics. (Source: Author) 111 Integrative framework. (Source: Author) 118 The emergence of practice-based management models in MNCs. (Source: Authors) 179 Case Ahlström. (Source: Authors) 209 Case Serlachius. (Source: Authors) 209 Entry situations and entry nodes (Source: Sandberg, 2013, p. 109)243 Example from Atlas (Source: Authors) 250 Entry nodes of the investigated family-managed SMEs (prior to first entrance to foreign markets) 251 Entry nodes of the investigated family-managed SMEs (after the first entrance to international markets) 256 Theoretical framework of the study. (Source: Author) 296 Directed content analysis applied in forming the category ‘Close FPR-­building for maintaining both economic and noneconomic goals’ with Firm B’s answers as an example. (Source: Author) 304 SEW levels of case firms, A–H. (Source: Author) 305 Coexistence of noneconomic and economic goals in driving small FFs’ active and close relationship-building with foreign partners for promoted internationalisation (Source: Author) 312 Timeline of Iberostar Group history. (Own elaboration from San Román, 2017) 336

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List of Figures

Fig. 12.1 Social capital, bifurcation bias, family values, and family structures in the internationalization of FFs. (Source: Elaborated by the authors) Fig. 13.1 Networking activities along different development periods. (Source: Author) Fig. 15.1 Three-circle framework of internationalization literature: finding a research gap. (Source: Author) Fig. 15.2 Family-firm internationalization: Institutional-level, family-level and firm-­level drivers. (Source: Author) Fig. 15.3 An integrated model of fast-growing emerging economy small family-firm internationalization. (Source: Author) Fig. 15.4 Ability-willingness (A-W) matrix of small family-firm internationalization in fast-growing emerging economies. (Source: Author) Fig. 15.5 Internationalization pathways followed by fast-growing emerging economy small family-firms. (Source: Author) Fig. 16.1 Moderating effects of home country institutional processes on family firm internationalization. A conceptual model. (Source: Author) Fig. 17.1 Solanos Hermanos S.A. value chain. (Source: Author)

368 403 463 474 476 510 511 532 562

List of Tables

Table 2.1 Table 2.2 Table 2.3 Table 3.1 Table 3.2 Table 3.3 Table 3.4 Table 4.1 Table 5.1 Table 5.2 Table 6.1 Table 6.2 Table 6.3 Table 7.1 Table 7.2 Table 7.3 Table 7.4 Table 8.1

Sample description Descriptive statistics and correlations Results of linear and logistic regressions The results of the PCA for the SEW-related factors Correlations of dependent, independent and control variables within family SMEs (scores within nonfamily SMEs in parentheses) Results of the linear regression for each independent variable separately with the dependent variable DOI Results of the multiple linear regression models with the dependent variable DOI Insights for future research Main findings in family business internationalization literature in relation to key concepts in the behavioral theory of the firm Summary of the areas for empirical research Interview data of the case study Comparison of subsidiary management and market features Comparison of the subsidiary management models Antti’s domestic and international identity-based and calculative ties Walter’s domestic and international identity-based and calculative ties Gustaf ’s domestic and international identity-based and calculative ties Gösta’s domestic and international identity-based and calculative ties Information on the investigated family-managed FFs

47 51 52 76 82 84 85 122 146 151 181 187 191 211 214 216 219 248 lxxi

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Table 8.2 Table 8.3 Table 9.1 Table 10.1 Table 10.2 Table 11.1 Table 12.1 Table 12.2 Table 12.3 Table 13.1 Table 13.2 Table 14.1 Table 14.2 Table 14.3 Table 15.1 Table 15.2 Table 15.3 Table 15.4 Table 15.5 Table 15.6 Table 15.7

List of Tables

Profile of the interviewees Entry nodes and post-entry nodes of the investigated firms GVC orchestration of family and non-family firms Basic information regarding the case firms and interviews SEW, FPR-building activity, and importance of FF status in FPRs and internationalisation Summary of data Background on FFs Interviews and informants Cross-case analysis: Family values, structure, and networks Observation period and data sources Networking characteristics of both entrepreneurs Contextual framework in the Nicaraguan coffee industry context Important dates for the Kühl family and the Selva Negra Farm. Source: Kühl family Data coding Studies on internationalization of small family-firms Studies on internationalization of Indian family-firms Definitions of micro, small and medium-sized enterprises Characteristics of case firms included in the study Details of the internationalization behaviour of the case firms Analysis of family factors affecting internationalization in the case firms Internationalization pathways of small Indian family-firms: An Augmented framework (based on Bell et al., 2003)

249 255 273 300 308 338 370 371 375 401 417 439 442 444 465 472 480 482 486 496 506

Part I Family Firm-Specific Views and Internationalization

1 Internationalization Decisions in Family Firms: The Impact of Bifurcation Bias Liena Kano, Alain Verbeke, and Andrew Johnston

Introduction Family firms play a major role in the world economy. As at June 2018, the world’s top 750 family firms generated annual revenues of over $9 trillion USD and employed nearly 30 million people (Davis, 2019). Moreover, in 2019, the top 500 global family firms outperformed the Fortune 500, with total annual revenues growing by 9.9% versus 8.6% for the Fortune 500—a testament to the ability of family-owned multinational enterprises (MNEs) to compete effectively in the global arena (EY & University of St. Gallen, 2019). The ubiquity and apparent success of family firms in the global marketplace have attracted much scholarly attention in the past two decades, and the field continues to grow. In a first comprehensive review of family firm internationalization studies, Kontinen and Ojala (2010) identified a total of 25 articles on family firm internationalization published in academic peer-reviewed

L. Kano (*) • A. Johnston Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada e-mail: [email protected]; [email protected] A. Verbeke Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), Brussels, Belgium Henley Business School, University of Reading, Reading, UK e-mail: [email protected] © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2021 T. Leppäaho, S. Jack (eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of Family Firm Internationalization, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-66737-5_1

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journals prior to 2009. In an extension of Kontinen and Ojala’s work, Pukall and Calabrò (2014) showed that research on family firm internationalization had grown significantly in the years following the first review: they found that 42 family firm internationalization studies had been published in the short, four-year period between 2008 and 2012 (as compared with Kontinen and Ojala’s sample of 25 studies over a 20 year period). Arregle, Duran, Hitt, and van Essen (2017) analysed 76 studies conducted between 2003 and 2013. Most recently, a review of the family firm literature by Metsola, Leppäaho, Paavilainen-Mäntymäki, and Plakoyiannaki (2020) identified 172 empirical studies on the internationalization of family firms conducted between 1998 and 2018. Much of this research is conducted from the family business, rather than international business (IB), perspective and utilizes general management and family business theoretical lenses (most frequently the agency and socioemotional wealth [SEW] perspectives), with IB theory somewhat underrepresented in this body of work. Recent work has been concerned with the dynamic and strategic elements of family firm internationalization to a greater extent than earlier work: for example, Metsola et al.’s (2020) analysis focuses on developing a process model of family firm internationalization. Still, most extant studies included in the above reviews focus on comparing the levels of internationalization between family firms and those with dispersed ownership (Arregle et al., 2017). The empirical results of these inquiries have tended to be inconclusive, if not contradictory. Studies by Fernández and Nieto (2006), Gomez-Mejia, Makri, and Larraza-Kintana (2010), and Graves and Thomas (2006), among others, found family firms to be less internationalized than their nonfamily counterparts, whereas other studies, for example, Singh and Gaur (2013) and Zahra (2003), have found them to be more internationalized. Still other studies (Cerrato & Piva, 2012; Pinho, 2007) have found no significant difference in internationalization levels between family and nonfamily firms. This latter conclusion has been confirmed more recently in a meta-analysis by Arregle et al., which found that “the association between a firm’s ownership (i.e., family vs. nonfamily) and internationalization is null” (Arregle et  al., 2017, p. 823). It has been suggested that the reason for these contradictory results stems from the omission of variables accounting for family firm heterogeneity at macro, firm, family and individual levels, such as, inter alia, differences in external operating environments (Carney, Gedajlovic, & Strike, 2014; Cruz, Larraza-Kintana, Garcés-Galdeano, & Berrone, 2014; Wright, Chrisman, Chua, & Steier, 2014), uniqueness of resource bundles and firm-level strategies (De Massis, Di Minin, & Frattini, 2015; Majocchi & Strange, 2012), differences in structures and types of founding families (Arregle, Hitt, &

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Mari, 2019), and individual-level characteristics and decision-making biases that ultimately impact family firms’ internationalization paths (Eddleston, Sarathy, & Banalieva, 2019; Kano & Verbeke, 2018; Majocchi, D’Angelo, Forlani, & Buck, 2018). Given the ambiguity of these empirical findings, it seems appropriate to focus on idiosyncratic family firm features that afffect not only the extent of these firms’ internationalization, but also more complex, dynamic aspects of international strategic governance. Several studies have made progress in this direction. A study by Graves and Thomas (2008) identifies three key variables of family firm internationalization: commitment levels, availability of financial resources and capacity for the development of capabilities critical for cross-border expansion. Banalieva and Eddleston (2011) find that family firms with nonfamily managers perform better when expanding outside of the home region, while family firms with family managers perform better when internationalization is home region-oriented. More recently, Hennart, Majocchi, and Forlani (2019) argued that success of family firms’ internationalization is contingent on a business model adopted by the firm, with high-­ quality global niche business models being particularly suited for family-controlled firms. Eddleston et al. (2019) refined these findings by suggesting that family firms’ ability to pursue successfully a high-quality niche business model is contingent on macro- and firm-level factors, such as a country of origin effect at the macro level, and professionalization practices at the firm level. Arregle et al. (2019) further elaborated that family firms’ ability and propensity to deploy a high-quality niche business model depend on the structure of the owning family. Xu, Hitt, and Dai (2020) conducted a nuanced investigation of the effect of family firms’ idiosyncratic features on the scale and scope of their internationalization. They found that financial performance influences the role of non-economic goals in foreign market entry decisions. Metsola et al. (2020) focused on temporal aspects of family firm internationalization, and suggested that unique features of family governance, both facilitative and constraining ones, influence family firms’ international strategies differently at various stages of the internationalization process. The above studies have augmented significantly our knowledge on family firm internationalization, but did not aim to develop a general, integrative conceptual approach to describe and explain this phenomenon in a fine-grained fashion. With that in mind, this chapter adopts an internalization theory perspective in order to explain and predict the ways in which family firms differ from each other, and from their nonfamily counterparts, in organizing and governing cross-border transactions. Internalization theory and its “sister” theory,

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transaction cost economics (TCE), are somewhat underrepresented in the study of family firm internationalization, with the exception of several studies exploring family firms’ choices of international market entry modes (e.g., Kao, Kuo, & Chang, 2013; Sestu & Majocchi, 2018). Recently, internalization theory scholars have suggested that family firms are subject to a unique barrier to efficient international governance in the form of bifurcation bias (Kano & Verbeke, 2018). Bifurcation bias is an affect-based decision-making logic that prioritizes heritage assets (assets with familial connections) over nonfamily assets, which are treated as lower-value commodity-type assets (Verbeke & Kano, 2012). In the context of internationalization, bifurcation bias affects both the success of cross-border activity and the specific internationalization paths adopted by family firms. In this chapter, we argue that the notion of bifurcation bias can serve as a “common denominator” to help explain internationalization behaviour of family firms. We explore the causes, symptoms, and specific impacts of bifurcation bias on international strategy. The remainder of the chapter is structured as follows. First, we give a brief overview of core theoretical constructs, namely internalization theory and bifurcation bias. Second, we discuss how bifurcation bias can lead to governance structures that are comparatively sub-optimal in the short- to medium-­ run. Third, we link bifurcation bias to extant theoretical constructs, namely the Schwartzian theory of values (Schwartz, 1992, 2006) and socioemotional wealth (SEW) (Gomez-Mejia, Haynes, Núñez-Nickel, Jacobson, & Moyano-­ Fuentes, 2007) to further investigate potential antecedents and consequences of bifurcation bias. Fourth, we discuss strategies to combat the formation of bifurcation bias, and to mitigate its effects. Figure 1.1 visualizes our new conceptual model, linking these various streams of research and summarizing our arguments.

Internalization Theory and the Family Firm Internalization theory is a branch of comparative institutional analysis that, in its current form, combines elements of Williamson’s (1996) version of transaction cost economics (TCE), the resource-based view (RBV), and entrepreneurship theory (Buckley & Casson, 1976; Narula & Verbeke, 2015). Internalization theory predicts that firms will, in the long run, select the modes of governance that are most efficient for conducting transactions across international borders (although inefficient structures and modes of operating may prevail in the short- to medium-term). Internalization theory also predicts that firms will choose the internal and external contracting arrangements

BB economizing: • Anticipative • Corrective

Interaction effects (reinforcement, co-existence, feedback)

BRat: Bounded rationality BRel: Bounded reliability BB: Bifurcation bias FF: Family firm FSA: Firm-specific advantages SEW: Socio-emotional wealth

Utilizing SEW for efficiency: • Assessment of SEW dimensions based on economizing/value creation properties; • Separation of functional and dysfunctional elements • Promotion of functional elements of SEW • Recombination

Governance choices for international transactions: • Location selection • Operating mode selection • Organization of external and internal transactions

Cause and effect relationships between decision drivers and governance outcomes

Affect-based drivers of international governance decisions: • Propensity for BB • SEW endowment

Efficiency-based drivers of international governance decisions: • Economizing on BRat • Economizing on BRel • Creating value through resource recombination

Fig. 1.1  International governance decisions and outcomes in family firms

Affect logic





Family firm: Idiosyncratic governance characteristics Reservoir of FSAs

Efficiency logic

Macro-contextual factors in home and host countries: • Formal and informal institutions FF micro-contextual factors: • Value/belief systems

Outcome: mix of functional and dysfunctional International governance configurations, with recalibration of the extant mix

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that best facilitate the successful recombination of resources across international borders in order to create value for the firm’s owners. The selected governance arrangements may also need to be adapted and/or restructured over time in order to efficiently address changes in the internal and/or external operating environments. The key governance decisions faced by a multinational enterprise (MNE) are (1) determining the boundaries of the firm: which activities to perform in-house versus externally, that is, the “make or buy” decision; (2) the organization of externalized activities: contract type and duration, types of alliances and/or partnerships and so on; and (3) the organization of internal activities: choices surrounding organizational structure, administrative relationships, human resource practices and so on. In addressing these issues, the most efficient forms of governance will be those that: (1) economize most effectively on bounded rationality;1 (2) economize most effectively on bounded reliability2 (Kano & Verbeke, 2015; Verbeke & Greidanus, 2009) and (3) provide the most favourable environment for the creation of value through resource recombination (Grøgaard & Verbeke, 2012; Verbeke & Kenworthy, 2008). In the absence of bifurcation bias, both family and nonfamily firms will approach the above decisions in an economizing way, based on their unique resource bundles and (internal and external) environmental contexts. Further, with respect to family firms, the most efficient governance structure is the one that uses the optimal mix of family and nonfamily resources both in home and in host countries. However, bifurcation bias can inhibit resource utilization and recombination, as we discuss in the following section.

 Bounded rationality is one of two behavioural assumptions which undergird Williamsonian TCE. Bounded rationality was defined canonically by Herbert Simon as behaviour which is “intendedly rational, but only limitedly so” (Simon, 1961, p. xxiv). Simon’s concept of bounded rationality provides a more useful and realistic cognitive-behavioural framework than strict rationality (as found in neoclassical economics) for describing the actions of economic actors with limited capacities for accessing and processing complex information, evaluating options and making optimal decisions. 2  Bounded reliability explains sources of commitment failure and is an extension of the second behavioural assumption of Williamsonian TCE—opportunism, described by Williamson as “self-interest seeking with guile” (Williamson, 1981, p. 1545), or “calculated efforts to mislead, distort, disguise, obfuscate or otherwise confuse” (Williamson, 1985, p. 47). Bounded reliability still allows for opportunistic behaviour as a cause of commitment failure, but also recognizes cases of commitment failure that materialize despite the ex ante good faith intentions of the unreliable actor (Verbeke & Greidanus, 2009), and includes such distinct manifestations as benevolent preference reversal and identity-based discordance (Kano & Verbeke, 2015). Thus, the behavioural assumption of bounded reliability takes into account the propensity of human actors (assumed technically competent) to fail in their commitments, but without the default assumption of malevolence implied by the narrower concept of opportunism. 1

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Bifurcation Bias: An Overview Bifurcation bias is “a unique, affect-based barrier to short and medium run efficient decision making in family firms, which manifests itself in two simultaneous, diverging patterns of behaviour towards family vs. nonfamily assets, applied systematically and by default” (Kano & Verbeke, 2018, p. 163). In bifurcation-biased firms, assets with a family connection are treated as heritage assets and assigned unique value, whereas nonfamily assets engender a negative affect and are typically viewed as generic and fungible. Bifurcation bias is therefore an expression of bounded rationality, as well as a potential source of bounded reliability in a family firm. When decisions are made using this affect heuristic instead of (boundedly) rational economic logic, the firm’s performance may suffer due to sub-optimal choices and prioritization of heritage assets, which in turn can create an environment that promotes severe bounded reliability. Not all family firms are bifurcation-biased; however, unlike firms with dispersed ownership, family firms exhibit an inherent propensity towards this dysfunctional bias (Verbeke & Kano, 2012); the family ownership and management also make it more difficult to correct the bias as compared to a traditional Chandlerian hierarchy, where dysfunctionalities are easier to observe and correct. Heritage assets can include both human and non-human assets. In the case of human assets, in a bifurcation-biased firm, employees who are family members will be treated as high-potential, high-value, and loyal agents of the firm, irrespective of their actual performance or actual potential for value creation. By contrast, nonfamily members may be viewed as less reliable, less loyal, and less valuable. In these instances, bifurcation bias will manifest itself in practices such as reluctance to monitor or discipline family employees while simultaneously displaying a generalized and unwarranted distrust for nonfamily employees (Dyer, 2006). Bifurcation bias towards human assets can afffect routines related to recruitment, promotion, performance evaluation, compensation, and resource allocation. The common practice of appointing highly competent, nonfamily managers to key leadership roles on an interim basis only until these positions can be filled permanently by family members (Lee, Lim, & Lim, 2003) is an example of bifurcation bias. Physical assets, product lines, locations, and investment projects are all examples of non-human assets that can be subject to bifurcation bias. Non-­ human heritage assets may also include intangibles such as firm knowledge and ways of doing things: processes, intellectual property, and so on. Attachment to such heritage assets can manifest itself in either functional or

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dysfunctional ways. In many situations, assets and governance mechanisms connected to the family owners will serve economizing purposes and support the continued health of the firm (see discussion below on SEW pursuits). However, in instances where bifurcation bias is present, there will be an inappropriate prioritization of these heritage assets versus perceived commodity assets. Such “inflexible attachment to existing assets and strategies characteristic of family firms” (Holt & Daspit, 2015, p. 83) and simultaneous neglect of potentially valuable resources and opportunities treated as commodity can lead to sub-optimal outcomes. For example, firms showing dysfunctional favouritism toward family-connected groups such as workers, investors, and community members (Bennedsen & Foss, 2015) may limit their social capital to the home community and thus fail to develop social ties with outside stakeholders that may aid international expansion (Ciravegna, Kano, Rattalino, & Verbeke, 2020). In many instances, bifurcation bias will arise in situations where changes in the internal and/or external environment mean that family assets that once served an economizing purpose no longer do so, but the family owners are not able or willing to engage in a sober reassessment of the place of these heritage assets in the firm. It is exactly this type of situation that the family firm often faces when pursuing international expansion into a new host market: assets which have served the family well in previous settings may no longer do so in the host country environment (Arregle et al., 2017; Verbeke & Kano, 2012). In such situations, a bifurcation-biased firm will overestimate the value creation potential of heritage assets and make decisions based on these false assessments. These decisions can lead to significant inefficiencies, as discussed in the next section.

 ifurcation Bias and International B Governance Decisions Successful internationalization generally requires an MNE to transfer, recombine, and/or upgrade its firm-specific advantages (FSAs) across national borders, in a way that allows achieving value creation and capture in host markets (Verbeke, 2013). Bifurcation bias can impair successful transfer, deployment and recombination of FSAs in the following ways: • The transferability and deployability of heritage assets across borders can be overestimated by the family firm. This can exacerbate the global illusion

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effect (to which family and nonfamily firms alike are susceptible), whereby a firm overestimates the extent to which its resources can be deployed outside the home market. In this scenario, the family firm may try to deploy a heritage FSA in a host market where there is in fact little potential for profitable exploitation. • The firm may choose to internalize cross-border “heritage-asset rich” transactions that would be more efficiently conducted externally in the host-­ market, while neglecting to internalize “commodity-asset rich” transactions that may represent core or vulnerable activities that should be performed in-house. • The selection of host country location may be impaired by the non-­ economic preferences of a bifurcation-biased family member (e.g., quality of life factors). • The recombination of heritage assets with host market resources, necessary for successful international expansion (Hennart, 2009), may be impaired by a dysfunctional distrust of outsiders (Banfield, 1958). In this instance, the family owners may be reluctant to recombine the firm’s heritage assets with the resources of nonfamily “outsiders”, thereby limiting responsiveness and adaptability to the host market environment. These hazards can further complicate situations where family firm managers may already be grappling with the challenges posed by compounded cultural, administrative, geographic and economic distance (Ghemawat, 2001; Rugman, Verbeke, & Nguyen, 2011). Specific governance decisions affected by bifurcation bias include location and entry mode choices and host country partner selection.

Bifurcation Bias and Host Country Location Selection When assessing location advantages, some of the variables that need to be considered in host country selection are comparative cost of contracting, the strength of labour markets, the strength of financial markets, the nature of demand, the strength of local institutions, and so on. In selecting a host location, managers must compare the location advantages of different markets and assess the cost of adapting their MNE’s FSAs in these new markets. In most cases, successful utilization of FSAs requires recombination of resources with host country assets. The accessibility and complementarity of these host country assets is a critical factor in the location selection decision (Hennart, 2009; Verbeke, 2013).

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Here, MNEs with dispersed ownership and unbiased family MNEs are likely to choose the location that has both the lowest costs for FSA adaption and the best access to required third-party complementary assets (Grøgaard & Verbeke, 2012). However, if a firm suffers from bifurcation bias, it may prioritize the non-economic objectives of family members to the detriment of the firm’s long-term economic goals. Family members’ preferences—personal location preference, presence of family networks, and so on—can lead to a sub-optimal geographic configuration of international activity (Kano & Verbeke, 2018). Writing about the expansion of the Rothschild banking empire during the 1830s, economic historian Niall Ferguson argued that “[w]ith the benefit of hindsight, the historian can see that the greatest omission of the period was the failure to establish a stable and reliable Rothschild base in the United States of America” (Ferguson, 1998, p. 354). While the five Rothschild brothers had enjoyed enormous success in the establishment of banking houses in the large European centres, none of their sons could be persuaded to take up the mantle and establish operations in the booming financial market of the United States. Commenting on this fact, Ferguson writes: What James [Rothschild] really wanted was for a Rothschild to go to America. But who? The debate on this question was to bedevil the Rothschilds’ America policy for decades to come: no one wanted to go there. (Ferguson, 1998, p. 370)

James’ difficulty in establishing a strong base in America due to the unwillingness of his nephews to relocate there was further exacerbated by his reluctance to give the job to an “outsider”—a prime example of bifurcation bias, whereby outside managers are viewed as incompetent, untrustworthy, or both: “to place our trust entirely in the hands of strangers is difficult” (Ferguson, 1998, p. 371). As employing a nonfamily manager to run American operations appeared unfeasible, the lucrative expansion opportunity was essentially abandoned. A desire to control the deployment of heritage assets abroad can also drive dysfunctionality in host country selection—that is, the family MNE may prioritize locations that will enable them to maintain maximum control over heritage assets, for example, locating production facilities only in those jurisdictions that permit full foreign ownership. In such a setting, host-country regulations regarding foreign direct investment (and the extent to which they may limit or reinforce family ownership) may prove decisive. Finally, biased preferences, such as loyalty to a home community, may prevent family MNEs from achieving efficiency through offshoring—a situation observed in the French family-owned automotive company Peugeot, where the founding

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family’s continued insistence on keeping a large share of production in France almost led the company to bankruptcy (Fainsilber, 2014). Nevertheless, it is important to reemphasize that the pursuit of non-­ economic goals (e.g., quality-of life seeking motive for international expansion) is not evidence of bifurcation bias in and of itself. Rather, it is when the pursuit of these non-economic goals is detrimental to the firm’s economic goals that it becomes dysfunctional and results in sub-optimal performance of the MNE. In many instances, the presence of network relationships and other family-connected factors can and do align with the best economic interests of the firm in host country selection and may in fact enable transactions that otherwise would not take place (e.g., relying on family networks in environments characterized by opportunistic competitive behaviour and weak legal and contracting institutions; see Ilias, 2006). Mustafa and Chen (2010) have shown that the presence of family networks in target host countries can endow family firms with significant advantages. Such networks provide access to resources that facilitate expansion. In these cases, the pursuit of non-economic goals harmonizes with the economic interests of the firm, provided that the functional elements of these non-economic pursuits outweigh the dysfunctional ones.

Bifurcation Bias and Operating Mode Selection Internalization theory predicts that, in the long run, an MNE will select the mode of operation that maximizes efficiency of deployment for its FSAs and economizes on the costs of recombining firm resource bundles with required complementary resources in the host country (Hennart, 2009). Based on these considerations, the MNE will choose whether to pursue a market exchange, a wholly owned subsidiary (either through a greenfield entry or an acquisition) or a cooperative entry with a local or international partner. If the MNE’s FSAs are vulnerable to appropriation by third parties and the required complementary assets are easily accessible in the host market, an equity-based full-ownership operating mode will likely be the most appropriate. If the FSAs in question are less vulnerable to appropriation (or less critical to value creation), then a cooperative or externally contracted operating mode is more efficient (Grøgaard & Verbeke, 2012; Rugman et al., 2011). However, in the presence of bifurcation bias, a family firm will overvalue heritage FSAs and undervalue perceived commodity FSAs. This will lead to the internalization of potentially low-value heritage FSAs that could be more efficiently exploited through external contracting, while deploying in

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contracts with external parties the potentially high-value commodity-type FSAs that are at risk of third-party appropriation or otherwise unsuitable for external transacting. The former scenario—that is, family firms’ tendency to gravitate towards operating modes that facilitate greater control (Boellis, Mariotti, Minichilli, & Piscitello, 2016; Memili, Chrisman, & Chua, 2011)—is fairly well explored in family firm literature. Protecting valuable heritage assets through internalization can be justified. Yet, dysfunctionality arises when emotional attachment to heritage routines, processes, or product lines prevents a biased family firm from outsourcing non-essential/low-value-added activities that involve standardized knowledge. The family may perceive a need to control fully the knowledge associated with these activities, even if that knowledge is not in fact subject to appropriation. This decision is connected to the location choice discussed above, as conducting heritage activities in the home country, or seeking host markets that allow for full ownership, may present the best way to exercise control over these activities. Italian confectionery company Ferrero, for example, internationalized sales and production under the leadership of legendary Michele Ferrero. However, the firm entered foreign markets using exclusively wholly owned subsidiaries that produced goods developed by Ferrero itself, and bearing Ferrero brands. Ferrero’s insistence on entering new markets only where it could launch its own brands and avoid acquisitions and diversification might have limited the extent and scope of its internationalization, which, perhaps not coincidentally, focused mainly on markets characterized by a relatively low distance, such as France and Germany (Ferrero Italia, 2017). Interestingly, Ferrero’s international strategy contrasts with that of its competitor Mars (also family owned), which acquired several related businesses in different markets (Mars, 2017), and that of Nestle, which owns a large and diversified portfolio of products and brands. After Michele’s death in 2015, Ferrero’s strategy seems to have changed. In 2015, the firm acquired Thorntons, a confectionery producer based in the UK, stating that it will keep Thorntons’ production facilities and brands. In 2016, Ferrero purchased Delacre, a Belgium-based biscuit manufacturer (Bricco, 2017). This suggests that under its new generation of management, the firm has become more willing to experiment with different entry modes, and to cede control over the development and branding of some of its products. In 2017, for the first time, Ferrero appointed a nonfamily CEO, signalling further change from the era of the family’s personal control of most of the firm’s activities (Murray Brown, 2017). The other scenario—that is, misguided externalization, following the least cost logic—is largely unexplored in family firm research, as family firms are

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argued to be prone to excessive internalization rather than excessive outsourcing (Memili, Chrisman, & Chua, 2011). Yet, dysfunctional externalization of activities wrongly perceived as using commodity-like resources is highly possible in bifurcation-biased family MNEs. It is exemplified in the history of the Fiat Group, an iconic Italian carmaker, presided over for decades by the late Giovanni (“Gianni”) Agnelli Jr. While Gianni Agnelli has arguably led Fiat to many international successes, he is also famous for prioritizing his personal aspirations, preferences and connections (Tagliabue, 2003). Agnelli’s personal fixation on the Fiat brand entailed under-investment in Alfa Romeo and Lancia, two other brands of Fiat automotive division, specialized in higher niche vehicles. As a consequence, both Alfa Romeo and Lancia exited from the racing competitions that made them famous, eroding the brand value they developed by being at the forefront of international motor racing—as examples, Enzo Ferrari worked at Alfa Romeo before founding Ferrari, and Ferrari was initially a spin out of Alfa Romeo. Lancia to this day remains a winner of the highest number of titles in the World Rally Championship, in spite of having exited that competition in the early 1990s. After years of the company’s under-investment in product development of other brands in order to boost Fiat, Alfa Romeo and Lancia sales declined, and both brands lost their significance in international markets (Berta, 2006). Another example of potentially bifurcation-biased approaches to operating mode selection is the propensity of family firms to pursue cooperative entry modes only when other family firms are available as potential alliance partners, and to disproportionately select kin-controlled partners (Memili, Chrisman, & Chua, 2011) over partners with dispersed ownership. Generally speaking, firms tend to favour other firms of similar status when engaging in transactions (Podolny, 1994), but this tendency is even more pronounced in family firms, which attach a socially constructed meaning of reliability to family governance (Reuber, 2016). Similar backgrounds and perceived shared values foster a “common bond” (Gomez-Mejia et al., 2010, p. 82) between the two families, which is seen by the focal MNE’s founding family as a safeguard against bounded reliability of partners. A recent empirical study by Sestu and Majocchi (2018) found that family firms are more likely to choose a joint venture mode of entry (versus a wholly owned subsidiary) if the partner organization in the host country is also a family firm. This may seem to be a reasonable economizing mechanism against bounded reliability, yet, evaluating potential alliance partners based, first and foremost, on ownership, could be an expression of bifurcation bias when this evaluation supersedes assessment of partners’ capabilities to perform adequately the outsourced task. Dysfunctionality will arise if the partner lacks requisite

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capabilities to perform the desired function in the host market, or if other, nonfamily-owned partners could perform those functions more efficiently. In unbiased family firms, entering into an agreement with a family-owned partner must be supplemented by careful due diligence, whereby potential partners are  assessed based on the nature, level and complementarity of their FSAs, as well as the expected costs and benefits of collaboration (Rugman & Verbeke, 2003; Yamin, 2011). Further, de facto excluding nonfamily firms from the consideration set may lead to adverse selection. Family ownership, as discussed in much family firm literature, has a dark side (Lubatkin, Schulze, Ling, & Dino, 2005) and thus, on its own, cannot serve as a safeguard against bounded reliability.

 he Magnitude and Impact of Bifurcation Bias: T Cultural Factors As mentioned above, not all family firms are bifurcation biased, and those firms that indeed exhibit bifurcation bias may do so to varying degrees. The firm’s propensity towards bifurcation bias, as well as the magnitude of this bias’s dysfunctional impact, depend on a number of factors, including, inter alia, individual-level characteristics of the firm members, and the cultural, institutional, economic and technological contexts within which the firm operates. The role of formal macro-level institutions in family firm internationalization is fairly well researched, with a general consensus that country-level institutions (e.g., minority stakeholder protection, inheritance laws, regulatory practices separating ownership and control, export orientation of the economy) are critical to explaining family firm internationalization (Arregle et al., 2017; Lehrer & Celo, 2017; Wright et al., 2014). In terms of bifurcation bias, it has been argued that strong formal institutions can serve as macro-­level safeguards against firm-level biased behaviour (Verbeke & Kano, 2012). In this section, we focus on the interplay between bifurcation bias and informal institutions, namely individual and societal cultural values. Schwartz and Rubel define values as “transituational goals, varying in importance, that serve as guiding principles in the life of a person or a group” (Schwartz & Rubel, 2005, p. 1008). In the family firm setting, these values often form an integral part of the firm’s DNA and inform decision-making related to both economic and non-economic goal pursuit (Arregle et  al., 2017; Zellweger, Kellermanns, Chrisman, & Chua, 2012).

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Schwartz3 (Schwartz, 2010) identifies two levels of values: those held at the personal level and those held at the cultural/societal level. In the setting of the family MNE, firm-level values may be affected both by the personally held values of influential individual family members and by the dominant cultural values of the firm’s home country (Verbeke, Yuan, & Kano, 2019).

Personal Values and Bifurcation Bias As a manifestation of affect-based decision-making, the roots of bifurcation bias can be traced back to the values held by influential members of the owning family. Schwartz (1992) specifies ten basic human values which are grouped within four “higher-order” values. The higher-order values operate on a two-dimensional spectrum. Along one dimension are the values of openness to change versus conservation. Along the second dimension are the values of self-transcendence versus self-enhancement. Verbeke et al. (2019) argue that within the context of family firm internationalization, the values most relevant to the formation and resultant effects of bifurcation bias are those related to openness versus conservation, and self-transcendence. Here, openness values encompass stimulation and self-direction; conservation values refer to conformity, tradition and security. The self-transcendence dimension includes universalism versus benevolence values, whereby universalism emphasizes tolerance and appreciation for the welfare of others, and benevolence emphasizes the welfare of in-group members (e.g., the family) (Schwartz, 1992). Verbeke et  al. (2019) suggest that families with strong conservation and benevolence values are more prone to bifurcation bias, and more likely to select lower levels of internationalization and make lower-quality international governance decisions. Such firms will naturally prioritize family-­ connected assets and resources over nonfamily ones in order to provide security, conformity, and adherence to tradition within the firm, and therefore may be reluctant to deploy nonfamily employees to manage foreign  While extant international business research has tended to use Hofstede’s (1980) framework of values as a default measurement instrument of cross-cultural differences, Schwartz’s dual theory of values has been somewhat underutilized, with some notable exceptions—see, for example, Duran et al. (2017). Although Schwartz’s dual theory is somewhat more complicated—Schwartz himself has acknowledged this difficulty (Schwartz, 2011)—the allowance which it makes for within-country variation of individual values provides for a subtlety of analysis which is useful when examining the critical role played by the individually held values of influential family firm owners and managers. Other conceptualizations of values commonly used in IB, such as Hofstede or GLOBE, appear to confuse the level of the individual with the level of the society (Schwartz, 2011), which makes Schwartz’s model superior for the purpose of our analysis. 3

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operations, and/or pursue expansion into such geographic and product areas where full control by the family is not an option. This pattern has been confirmed by studies such as that of Kets de Vries (1996), which highlights the tendency within family firms to provide secure employment and other privileges for family members. Conversely, family firms where key family members exhibit openness to change and universalism values are less prone to bifurcation bias; the direct effect of these values on internationalization, as well as the indirect effect through bifurcation bias, is likely to be positive. That is, such firms are likely to exhibit higher internationalization levels and make higher-quality international governance decisions. Here, international governance choices are expected to be made according to comparative institutional logic, involving the most competent individuals, whether family or nonfamily.

Societal Values and Bifurcation Bias While individual firm owners within the same country can and do vary in the personal values which they espouse, the dominant societal values of the firm’s home country nevertheless play a significant normative role in setting the expectations and context in which the firm operates. Both internal firm functions (such as the socializing of staff and the managing of interactions between teams) and external firm functions (such as the formation of network relationships with clients and suppliers) are influenced by the dominant cultural values in the firm’s home country. These values also form the expectations and norms to which the family firm owners must conform in order to achieve legitimacy within their host communities. Thus, although individual firm owners’ personal values may vary, they will nevertheless be shaped and constrained by the macro-values of the environment in which the firm operates. Schwartz (2006) outlines seven dominant cultural values: (1) embeddedness versus (2) intellectual autonomy, and/or (3) affective autonomy; (4) egalitarianism versus (5) hierarchy; and (6) mastery versus (7) harmony. Various combinations of the above values prevailing in a given society shape the cultural background and context in which the firm must operate. While individual firms and firm owners may vary in their degree of conformity to the values of their culture, significant deviation from societal expectations will cause problems for the firm, leading to ostracism and possibly even political and/or legal censure. Schwartz identifies seven historical cultural groups that correspond to the seven societal/cultural values: Confucian; South Asian;

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African/Middle-Eastern; Western European; Eastern European; English-­ speaking; and Latin American. Verbeke et  al. (2019) argue that of the seven societal values outlined by Schwartz, the ones that are most relevant to the development of bifurcation bias are (1) those that address the nature of the relationship between the individual and the group (embeddedness versus intellectual autonomy, and/or affective autonomy): and (2) those that ensure the preservation of societal fabric (egalitarianism versus hierarchy). The dimension of embeddedness versus autonomy defines the relationship between the individual and the group and, thus, plays a significant role in determining how family members view family and nonfamily employees, as well as determining how family and nonfamily employees view themselves within the firm. Embeddedness values prioritize group solidarity, family security, social order and deference to the collective interests of the group. Individuals that are part of an embeddedness society are more likely to view the preferential treatment of family members within the firm as both normal and acceptable, in keeping with the values of the wider society in which the firm operates. By supporting such attitudes and behaviours, nonfamily employees within embeddedness cultures are both more likely to encourage the manifestation of bifurcation bias within the firm, and more likely to mitigate its negative impact by avoiding agency-type reactions. The dimension of hierarchy versus egalitarianism addresses the way individuals view and interact with each other. In egalitarian cultures, individuals view each other as moral equals and are socialized to promote and expect a cooperative form of interaction in their relationships. Hierarchical cultures, on the other hand, ascribe well-defined roles to different individuals within a clear and well-understood structure of authority. Individuals operating within a hierarchical culture are more likely to accept obligations attached to their specified roles as a given and treat authority relationships with the deference prescribed by their position within the hierarchy. In societies characterized by strong hierarchical values, family firm owners are more likely to demonstrate preferential treatment of family employees as the natural consequence of their role-based authority positions within the firm, while nonfamily employees are more likely to view this preferential treatment as the normal and acceptable privilege that is due based on that position. Nonfamily employees are therefore more likely to respond to manifestations of bifurcation bias with stewardship-­type behaviour and continue to remain loyal and committed to the family owners and the firm. Verbeke et al. (2019) further suggest that societal values impact the role of bifurcation bias in cross-border transfer and recombination of FSAs in family

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firms. As mentioned above, bifurcation-biased family firms are generally likely to overestimate the transferability, deployment and profitable exploitation potential of heritage FSAs, while underestimating the potential of commodity FSAs (Kano & Verbeke, 2018). Somewhat paradoxically, value similarities between home and host countries can exacerbate the dysfunctional impact of bifurcation bias on international governance. Cultural proximity may encourage foreign entry (Duran, Kostova, & van Essen, 2017), but discourage careful assessment of FSA transferability, with firm owners viewing the similarity of societal values as a guarantee of a seamless transfer of heritage FSAs. Here, the family may underestimate the need for FSA adaptation and novel resource combinations, which will impede value creation in the host market.

SEW Pursuit and Family Firm Internationalization Socioemotional wealth (SEW) refers to “the nonfinancial aspects of the firm that meet the family’s affective needs, such as identity, the ability to exercise family influence, and the perpetuation of the family dynasty” (Gomez-Mejia et al., 2007, p. 106). SEW represents a dominant conceptual lens in family firm research and has been invoked extensively in the study of family firm internationalization. SEW-related objectives are argued to impact family firm diversification strategies (Gomez-Mejia et  al., 2007), innovation (Patel & Chrisman, 2014), and internationalization paths (Gomez-Mejia et al., 2010), in that family firms are likely to select strategies that carry the least likelihood of SEW dissipation. Unchecked emphasis on various SEW dimensions may clash with comparative efficiency-based evaluation of international governance alternatives. For example “make or buy” decisions, decisions regarding the interface with the external environment (e.g., partner selection), and internal organization decisions for each cross-border transaction or a class of transactions will not be made at the service of economizing/value creation objectives, but will aim to first and foremost preserve SEW.

SEW Versus Bifurcation Bias SEW is related to, but not synonymous with, bifurcation bias. Bifurcation bias represents a systemic dysfunctional pursuit of socioemotional preferences and usage of heritage assets. It can impair the economic health of the firm. SEW pursuit, on the other hand, can dovetail harmoniously with economizing behaviour. Miller et  al. (2015, p.  21) refer to the functional and

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complementary pursuit of SEW as “creating an evergreen organization”. Functional elements of SEW include the emphasis on positive reputation, preservation of a family network, long-term horizons of strategic decisionmaking, and other priorities and activities which help the firm create value in host markets. For example, concentrated control allows family firms significant latitude in decision-­making in the realm of international strategy (De Massis, Kotlar, Chua, & Chrisman, 2014). Identification with and emotional attachment to the firm foster commitment to quality (Hennart et al., 2019) and help family firms establish positive reputations in host countries. Focusing on social ties leads to advanced relational capabilities (Ward, 2004), which can be critical for overcoming the liability of outsidership (Johanson & Vahlne, 2009). Dynastic aspirations contribute patient capital (Chrisman, Chua, De Massis, Frattini, & Wright, 2015) to international operations. SEW dimensions can thus foster unique FSAs that family firms can leverage to support their international activity. However, the above potential benefits of SEW are likely to accrue only to those family firms that actively monitor for and economize against bifurcation bias. Bifurcation bias economizing constrains SEW pursuit: In unbiased family firms, SEW objectives are assessed based on their compatibility with efficient governance choices, and are promoted only if they have economizing and value-creating properties in host countries (Kano, Verbeke, & Ciravegna, 2020). For example, a family MNE may pursue internalization in a host country if sustained family control afforded by internalization reduces transaction costs through simplified decision-making, better intellectual property protection, or greater strategic flexibility; conversely, if family control does not serve efficiency purposes (i.e., if the cost of market transactions is lower than the cost of organizing interdependencies inside the MNE, Hennart & Park, 1993), alternative operating modes (e.g., a joint venture or market transactions) will be selected. Conversely, in bifurcation-biased family firms driven by unconstrained SEW goals, SEW is de facto prioritized and guides international strategy decisions, which can lead to dysfunctional governance. Decisions related to the boundaries of the firm, the organization of the external interface, and internal organization will likely veer towards arrangements that enable greater control and monitoring of dispersed operations by the family (Banalieva & Eddleston, 2011). For example, pursuit of sustained family control may lead to a rejection of external investors, over-reliance on wholly owned operating modes (Boellis et al., 2016; Memili, Chrisman, & Chua, 2011; Memili, Chrisman, Chua, Chang, & Kellermanns, 2011; Sestu & Majocchi, 2018), and a preference for top-down internal management systems that facilitate hands-on

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involvement but may not match the complexity of international operations (Alessandri, Cerrato, & Eddleston, 2018). Unconstrained SEW pursuit means that these governance arrangements will be selected even if they are inferior in terms of their actual efficiency properties.

F acilitative Role of SEW in Unbiased Firms: The Imperative of Recombination We have argued above that constrained SEW pursuit can equip family firms with unique advantages vis-à-vis their nonfamily counterparts. However, family firms also suffer from a number of resource weaknesses in international markets, which are essentially “the flip side” of their advantages (Hennart et al., 2019, p. 763), and fall into three general and interrelated categories. First, SEW-based desire for control leads to particularistic human resources practices (Carney, 2005) and a consequent shortage of sophisticated managerial capabilities, which are important in complex international environments (Banalieva & Eddleston, 2011; Graves & Thomas, 2006). Second, family MNEs’ preference for internally generated equity over debt and outside financing, stemming from unwillingness to dilute control, restricts financial resources necessary for internationalization (Hennart et  al., 2019). Third, emphasis on control and binding social ties may lead to isolation from other firms and from external actors, which negatively affects family firms’ knowledge related to internationalization; this knowledge includes, inter alia, information about host country institutions, business intermediaries, competition, and consumer preferences. In addition, family firms’ FSAs that stem from their SEW preferences are frequently location-bound: specifically, social ties and reputation are often focused on the home community and cannot always be efficiently relied upon in international transactions (Arregle, Hitt, & Sirmon, 2007; Kano, Ciravegna, & Rattalino, 2021). Even when theoretically transferable, FSAs such as superior relational capabilities and long-term orientation are not guaranteed to be profitable in host markets (Verbeke, 2013), as they need to be supplemented by host country–specific knowledge and access to local networks in order to be exploited efficiently. Internalization theory posits that weaknesses in firms’ host country FSA portfolios can be compensated through recombination, which means leveraging the firm’s own FSAs in alternative configurations and/or integrating complementary resources of external actors in host markets. Recombination capability is a higher-order FSA in its own right, and a critical prerequisite for

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international competitive success (Collinson & Narula, 2014; Narula, 2014; Verbeke, 2013). In the context of family firms, SEW-driven idiosyncratic resources and capabilities add value in foreign markets only if productively linked with complementary resources, so as to compensate for extant FSA weaknesses and to address differences between home and host markets. Frescobaldi, a 700-year old Italian wine producer currently in the 31st generation of family management, achieved such linkage by forming a joint venture with family-owned Mondavi, one of the leading US wine producers. At the time of its entry into the US market, Frescobaldi was an established wine producer, with a stellar domestic reputation, sophisticated modern production technologies, and wine-making techniques and recipes that have been honed over centuries. Yet, the company lacked advanced management practices, knowledge about foreign market dynamics, host country marketing tactics, and efficient use of media. These resources and capabilities were supplied by the joint venture partner, and a new wine developed through the partnership went on to become one of Frescobaldi’s most successful products in international markets (interview with Lamberto Frescobaldi, President and 30th-generation family leader, 20174). It should be noted that recombination may require family firms to surrender a certain degree of control (particularly when required capabilities are owned by outside actors), to shed resources, and to depart from traditional routines. This may be difficult in the presence of bifurcation bias, and, as such, successful recombination is conditional on the presence of strategies to economize on bifurcation bias, which we discuss next.

Economizing on Bifurcation Bias Internalization theory predicts that the inefficiencies brought by bifurcation bias will cause sub-optimal governance decision in the short- to medium-run. In the long run, the systemic inefficiencies bifurcation bias causes will be eliminated—either through a change in specific practices and routines, a major change in governance (i.e., by converting to a Chandlerian hierarchy), or by the firm simply ceasing to exist. It is therefore imperative that family firms learn to implement economizing strategies to combat bifurcation bias in order to survive as profitable family-owned MNEs. This means aligning the

 The interview was conducted in 2017 as part of data collection for a large-scale family firm governance research project. 4

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firm’s non-economic goals with efficient international strategy in a way that limits bifurcation bias in the firm’s decision-making.

General Economizing Strategies Kano and Verbeke (2018) outline six strategies that can help family firms combat the formation of bifurcation bias and mitigate its potential impacts: (1) cross-border operational meritocracy; (2) targeted international education of family managers; (3) structured processes for making international expansion decisions; (4) rigorous measurement of international performance (e.g., benchmarking); (5) purposeful exposure to unbiased scrutiny; and (6) intentional implementation of reverse bifurcation bias in decision-making. These strategies are briefly discussed below. 1. Cross-border operational meritocracy. Research has demonstrated that the quality of international operations and decision-making can be improved significantly by the implementation of explicitly merit-based, professionalized HR practices including hiring, promotion and role allocation (Chrisman, Memili, & Misra, 2014; Eddleston et  al., 2019; Holt & Daspit, 2015; Verbeke & Kano, 2012). Implementing a rigorous meritbased HR policy ensures that competent and unbiased employees oversee complex international business decisions. The term “operational meritocracy” was first coined by the Merck family—the family in charge of the German pharmaceutical and chemical firm Merck. Merck exemplifies this practice, intentionally protecting the firm’s international governance and operations by entrusting managerial responsibility to those who are deemed to be most competent, irrespective of their family affiliation or lack thereof (Glemser & Leleux, 2011). Importantly, nonfamily managers must have full authority over their domains, rather than playing a ceremonial role, with the family routinely overriding strategic decisions made by nonfamily executives (Ciravegna et al., 2020). 2. Targeted international education of family managers. Research has shown that if family firms neglect to properly invest in the training and education of family members, they can suffer negative ramifications in technically and managerially complex settings in which MNEs operate (Miller et al., 2015; Verbeke & Kano, 2012). Successful family MNEs, such as Merck and Mars, ensure that prospective family managers are trained and educated appropriately. In the case of Merck, this involves sending future family employees abroad for an international education in order to expose

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4.

5.

6.

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them to aspects of international culture and business (Neumann & Tapies, 2007). Mars stipulates that in order for family members to be considered for a high-level position within the firm, they must first have successfully launched and managed an independent international business venture on their own (Clark, 2008; Kaplan, 2013). Structured processes for international decision-making. Family firms are generally observed to have low levels of formalization due to their relational style of management and direct ownership control (König, Kammerlander, & Enders, 2013). However, this informal/relational approach to firm management can create an environment in which bifurcation bias goes unchecked. In the complex operating environment of the MNE, it is necessary to put in place formalized and objective decision-making processes in order to economize on bounded rationality and reliability and manage potential instances of bifurcation bias. Measurement of international performance. Recent research has shown that family firms can reduce dysfunctional management decision-making by introducing performance benchmarking against other international firms (De Massis, Kotlar, Mazzola, Minola, & Sciascia, 2018). This type of objective self-assessment is practiced by successful international family firms, such as the aforementioned Merck pharmaceutical group, as well as Carlson Group (a US-based hotel and travel MNE). Purposeful exposure to unbiased scrutiny. Opening up the firm to unbiased third-party scrutiny is a very effective way to uncover and address bifurcation bias. This can be accomplished in a number of ways, including the use of external consulting firms, the presence of a strong board of directors and/or taking the firm public. A recent empirical study by Bauweraerts, Sciascia, Naldi, and Mazzola (2019) found that, among the 248 Belgian SMEs in the dataset, the presence of a strong and active board that included external directors was a significant predictor of superior internationalization performance for family firms versus their nonfamily competitors. Reverse bifurcation bias. The final way in which a family firm can combat bifurcation bias is by engaging in deliberate reverse bifurcation bias. This entails flipping the bias around so that heritage assets are held to a higher standard of scrutiny and performance evaluation than nonfamily ones (Jennings, Dempsey, & James, 2018). By adding an extra layer of scrutiny and scepticism to the assessment of family assets, family firms can exercise a self-conscious awareness of their propensity to bifurcation bias and take measures to compensate for it.

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Timing and Scale of Bifurcation Bias Economizing The question arises as to when corrections for bifurcation bias are likely to occur. Verbeke and Fariborzi (2019) outline two dimensions along which MNEs differ in their implementation of governance changes in response to observed inefficiencies: (1) the timing of adaptation (anticipative versus corrective) and (2) the scale of adaptation (large-scale versus small-scale). Anticipative adaptation seeks to implement economizing solutions at the level of the firm’s overarching governance features before problems arise. Because anticipative adaption interacts with the firm’s strategy formation, it tends to be large-scale and targets all relevant operations. Within the family-­ owned MNE, anticipative economizing on bifurcation bias may include strategies such as targeted international education of family members or an intentionally fostered culture of operational meritocracy that sees nonfamily employees occupying senior roles within the firm (see above). Crucially, and as its name implies, anticipative economizing strategies are put in place before bifurcation bias creates a crisis for the firm. When anticipative strategies are not put in place to combat bifurcation bias, or when extant anticipative practices prove ineffective, crises may arise which require the firm to pursue corrective adaptations to meet the challenges caused by sub-optimal (i.e., bifurcation-biased) decisions. Corrective economizing measures can be taken at the localized or firm-wide level. Localized corrective measures attempt to address the pain-point directly, for example, by the replacement of an underperforming family manager in a foreign subsidiary with a competent, local, nonfamily manager. While this type of localized corrective economizing may address the immediate crisis at hand, it often risks addressing isolated “symptoms” rather than the systemic issues that are causing them. Large-scale corrective adaptations, on the other hand, while also triggered as a response to a specific problem or crisis-point, seek to address issues of bifurcation bias at the firm’s overall governance level. In some cases, however, the options available for corrective economizing may not suffice to reverse the damage caused by previous bifurcation-biased decisions (i.e., too-little and/or too-late). As mentioned above, in these instances internalization theory predicts that the firm will fail in a given market or, in extreme cases, cease to exist as a family firm or cease to exist at all (Verbeke & Kano, 2012). This may have been the case with the Dutch apparel and clothing retailer C&A, founded in the nineteenth century. C&A entered the US market in 1948, mainly because of the controlling family’s life-long aspirations to have a US market presence. During the 1950s, the firm had to

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close several of its US branches because of heavy losses. The family later concluded that management had underestimated the differences of the US market, primarily the higher wages, higher pressure on prices, greater competition, and difficulties in establishing long-term relationships with suppliers. This assessment of performance, however, did not immediately spur corrective action. The firm remained in the US market until 2000, sustaining losses for a prolonged period of time. C&A eventually exited the market, in spite of the dramatic expansion of the business concept it helped pioneer—affordable, mass-produced, fast fashion clothing and apparel (Spoerer, 2016).

Conclusion In this chapter, we have focused on the concept of bifurcation bias as a way to explain unique internationalization features of family firms, and these firms’ potential deviation from efficient international governance. Using internalization theory as our conceptual lens, we have argued that family and nonfamily firms are subject to the same economic logic: in the long run, they will select the most efficient international governance structures. However, in the short run, the presence of bifurcation bias can lead to sub-optimal international governance decisions. The firm’s propensity towards such dysfunctionality, as well as the magnitude of the negative impact of sub-optimal decisions on the firm’s long-term viability, depends on a number of factors discussed above, including personal values and aspirations of the owners, the cultural characteristics of home and host countries, the firm’s recombination capabilities, and, importantly, the firm’s ability and willingness to implement systematically a set of strategies to identify and safeguard against affective decision biases, as summarized in Fig. 1.1. It should be noted that nonfamily firms can also display biases that result in sub-optimal international governance. MNEs with dispersed ownership are susceptible to numerous impediments to sound decision-making in the shortand medium-term, resulting from bounded rationality and bounded reliability challenges. These types of barriers to efficient international decision-making can affect all firms, but only family firms are subject to bifurcation bias. On the positive side, family firms can benefit from unique features that make them competitive in international markets vis-à-vis their nonfamily counterparts. These benefits represent functional features of SEW and include, inter alia, superior reputation, emphasis on quality, managerial and employee dedication to the firm, strong networks, and long-term horizons of strategic decision-­making (Carney, Dieleman, & Taussig, 2016; Duran, Kammerlander,

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van Essen, & Zellweger, 2015; Erdener & Shapiro, 2005; Hennart et  al., 2019). The paradox of the family firm is that unconstrained promotion of SEW, in the absence of bifurcation bias economizing, will fail future family generations in terms of both economic wealth and SEW preservations. The pursuit of intergenerational, economic and socioemotional family wealth is what differentiates family firms from nonfamily ones, but such pursuit, if it is to be successful, must necessarily go at the expense of managerial practices that indiscriminately reward family heritage and family membership. Although still relatively new to the family firm internationalization literature, the concept of bifurcation bias is already proving a fruitful avenue for both conceptual and empirical enquiry (Arregle et  al., 2019; Bauweraerts et  al., 2019; Eddleston et  al., 2019; Jennings et  al., 2018; Metsola et  al., 2020). It is our hope that future research into the phenomenon of bifurcation bias will provide further insights for family firm and IB scholars, as well as additional strategic tools for managers of international family firms.

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2 Internationalisation and Family Involvement: A Stewardship Approach in the Hotel Industry Laura Rienda, Enrique Claver, and Rosario Andreu

Introduction Research on the internationalisation process of family firms (FFs) continues investigating the influence of family on different aspects of the process. Different theories are employed to explain the behaviour of FFs and to balance the two most important issues in these companies: the family and the business. Emotional reactions can be in opposition to, or in line with, managerial and organisational considerations. The stewardship theory proposes that firms take decisions based on a steward prioritising pro-organisational and collectivistic behaviours over individualistic and self-serving behaviours. Through this theory, the steward (manager) believes that by working towards business aims, personal needs are met (Davis, Schoorman, & Donaldson, 1997). Stewardship behaviour should be related with trust, involvement, collectivism, commitment and long-term orientation. According to the stewardship theory, internationalisation is viewed as an opportunity to make the business more competitive and increase the chances of successful growth (Segaro, 2012). This perspective also tries to align the interests of the family and the company and helps us to understand some specific behaviours of family managers (Chrisman, Chua, Kellermanns, & Chang, 2007; Corbetta & Salvato, 2004; Le Breton-Miller & Miller, 2009;

L. Rienda (*) • E. Claver • R. Andreu Department of Management, University of Alicante, Alicante, Spain e-mail: [email protected] © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2021 T. Leppäaho, S. Jack (eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of Family Firm Internationalization, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-66737-5_2

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Miller & Le Breton-Miller, 2006). Family managers are strongly committed to the enterprise and act for its good, even if that implies personal sacrifice (Davis, Schoorman, Mayer, & Tan, 2000). FFs thus adopt a longer-term vision and are able to take riskier strategic decisions with the aim of preserving the continuity of the firm for future generations. Amongst these strategic decisions, internationalisation arises as one of the main challenges for FFs (Spanish Family Firm Institute, 2018). Despite the potential risk involved in this strategy, internationalisation can be an attractive long-term strategy because it can bring competitive advantages (Claver, Rienda, & Quer, 2009). In this case the risk is considered necessary for the business to prosper. In this study we will focus on the Spanish hotel industry, a sector with a large percentage of FFs (Andreu, Claver, Quer, & Rienda, 2019). A great number of firms in this sector are highly internationalised (Assaf, Josiassen, & Oh, 2016). Following the premises of the stewardship theory, we analyse the influence of family on two important decisions for international FFs: the degree of internationalisation and the entry mode used in each market. This analysis allows us to evaluate the impact of different characteristics associated with FF involvement in internationalisation. More precisely, the influence of family ownership and management, a family CEO and the current generation on the internationalisation process of family hotels, underlining the importance of considering the heterogeneity of FFs in this sector. The contribution of this study is twofold. First, it considers the heterogeneity of FFs, and how this heterogeneity potentially influences key strategy decisions such as internationalisation. Although it is a topic that has received attention previously, the results are not conclusive, so new empirical evidence is necessary. Second, it is focused on an important sector in Spain, the hotel sector. This sector is made up of a high percentage of family businesses. However, the relationship between the characteristics of family hotel companies and their internationalisation has received little attention. This study provides new empirical evidence about one of the main growth options for these specific family businesses. The rest of the study is divided as follows. First, the literature review section includes a revision of different studies on FFs and internationalisation, focusing on the hotel industry. Second, the methodology section describes the sample and the variables included in our study. Third, the results section shows the main results and the confirmation of the previously developed hypotheses. The study continues with a discussion section, which explains the relationships we found linked with the premises of the stewardship theory. Contributions, limitations and future research are also included. And, finally, the conclusion section concludes the chapter.

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Literature Review Definition and Heterogeneity of FFs Different definitions of FFs have been considered, according to the presence of family in ownership or management (Abdellatif, Amann, & Jaussaud, 2010; Kraus, Mensching, Calabrò, Cheng, & Filser, 2016), or different kinds of firms in which family involvement plays a crucial role (Andreu et al., 2019; Arregle, Duran, Hitt, & van Essen, 2017; Casillas & Acedo, 2005). The consensus is to identify a firm as an FF when family members own a majority of shares, are involved in management, are present on the board of directors and wish to pass on the firm to subsequent generations (Mazzi, 2011). Family involvement brings a new point of view to the definition of FFs. Multiples studies focus on determining whether a firm is an FF or not, but it is more interesting to analyse the degree of familiness to reveal heterogeneity in FFs. Familiness is considered to be the identification of “resources and capabilities that are unique to the family's involvement and interactions in the business” (Pearson, Carr, & Shaw, 2008, p. 949). Considering different aspects related to the family in business may contribute to a better understanding of FF characteristics (Alayo, Maseda, Iturralde, & Arzubiaga, 2019; Chua, Chrisman, Steier, & Rau, 2012). The role of the family could change the direction of a business. As Fang, Kellermanns and Eddleston (2019, p. 70) point out, “the degree to which the family is involved in the day-to-day operations and the strategic direction of the firm are likely to serve as distinguishing features that influence family business behaviour and goals”. Family involvement is related with their level of control and it is defined as the level of power held by family members (Gersick, Davis, Hampton, & Lansberg, 1997). Attending to ownership and management, high levels of concentrated control in the family indicates that the power in the organisation is limited to family members or to an individual founder, showing a high family involvement, whereas lower levels suggest that many individuals share power in the FF (Eddleston & Kellermanns, 2007). In terms of generations, founder(s) and generation(s) close to the founder usually have a high level of control and this is related to greater family involvement (Miller, Le Breton-Miller, Lester, & Cannella, 2007). Some authors consider family involvement in a single variable when studying the internationalisation process of FFs, grouping different family aspects together (Andreu et  al., 2019; Arregle et  al., 2017). However, in line with other studies, our research considers these aspects individually, that is, the

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effect of ownership and management (Chen, Hsu, & Chang, 2014); the role of a family CEO (Westhead & Howorth, 2006) and the influence of a later generation on corporate strategy decisions (Claver et al., 2009; Fernández & Nieto, 2005). This approach will allow us to better identify the incidence of family involvement in internationalisation, taking into account the heterogeneity that FFs present.

 gency Theory, Socioemotional Wealth Theory A and Stewardship Theory Traditionally, different theories have justified the strategic decision-making process of the firm by considering the role of each power group and who has control (Segaro, 2012). A greater or lesser organisational outcome, according to the coincidence or not of the ownership and the management in the same person, was a key study in management (Donaldson & Davis, 1991; Muth & Donaldson, 1998). For example, the agency theory argues that managers could display opportunistic behaviour at the expense of shareholder interests (Williamson, 1995). This theory proposes that managers try to maximise their individual utility (Jensen & Meckling, 1976). Also, when the CEO holds the dual role of chair, then the interests of management prevail over the interests of owners. Agency loss appears in this case, emphasising the search of self-interest by managers. For FFs, ownership and management interests are aligned and agency costs are low (Jensen & Meckling, 1976). Nevertheless, as Chua, Chrisman, and Sharma (2003) point out, the validity of the assumption of low- or no-agency costs in family firms depends on the presence of reciprocal altruism or stewardship on the part of managers. In recent years, the socioeconomic wealth (SEW) perspective has gained widespread attention in FF studies (Hauck & Prügl, 2015). This theory explores the decision process of FFs and advocates for more conservative long-­ term behaviour in these firms (Calabrò, Minola, Campopiano, & Pukall, 2016). From an agency perspective the focus is on misalignments of interest among organisational actors, emphasising a short-term orientation. The SEW premises offer an alternative viewpoint. It points out that wealth is the priority for FFs and the family owners and managers work to protect this wealth (Gómez-Mejía, Haynes, Núñez-Nickel, Jacobson, & Moyano-Fuentes, 2007). The preservation of the family’s wealth leads managers to take less risky decisions, forgoing opportunities such as international activities (Zahra, 2005). A different view is provided by the stewardship theory. From this perspective, managers should be good stewards of corporate assets (Donaldson &

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Davis, 1991). A dual role of CEO and chair could align the interests of the firm with those of the shareholders when there is long-term compensation. Managerial behaviour leans towards a range of non-financial motives acting in the benefit of shareholders (Muth & Donaldson, 1998). Therefore, “stewardship theory defines situations in which managers are not motivated by individual goals, but rather are stewards whose motives are aligned with the objectives of their principals” (Davis et  al., 1997, p.  21). This perspective proposes that managers take decisions in favour of the organisation and with collectivistic over individualistic behaviours. Pro-organisational objectives, as opposed to self-interested objectives, are promoted. Despite its potential, the stewardship theory has not been extensively adopted in family-business studies. Nevertheless, some authors admit that stewardship relationships may exist, or even prevail, at least in some FFs (Chrisman et  al., 2007; Vallejo, 2009). In this study we consider that the stewardship theory could provide a useful framework to explain the dynamics and relationships observed in family hotels (Corbetta & Salvato, 2004).

FF Internationalisation FF literature includes studies on international strategy with different and mixed findings (Arregle et al., 2017). On the one hand, we found studies that emphasise the aversion to risk of FFs and how this aversion could hamper international activity (Graves & Thomas, 2006). Nevertheless, other authors stress the positive attributes of FFs and how they can positively affect the internationalisation process (Zahra, 2003). Attending to these inconclusive results, the difference in degrees of internationalisation could be due to the variance emanating from the differences in the level of family involvement. Some studies highlight the idea that FFs link emotional and managerial aspects, and this link leads the firm to take less risky decisions. More precisely, decisions related to the internationalisation process are considered riskier because they could entail uncertainty to the managers (Gómez-Mejía, Makri, & Larraza, 2010; Kraus et  al., 2016; Pukall & Calabrò, 2014). Internationalisation implies entering a new market, usually with different rules, which in many cases is unknown, and which requires significant investment. The SEW theory has studied this area of research and it points out that FFs could be less internationalised. The goal is to reduce all the risks that could lead to losing the family business (Chen, Huang, & Chen, 2009; Ray, Mondal, & Ramachandran, 2018). The possible loss of legacy makes the FFs more conservative and limits international expansion.

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Nevertheless, from the stewardship theory, strategic decisions by FFs are taken with an organisational and collectivistic purpose, prioritising managerial objectives—such as business growth and long-term orientation—over emotional ones—such as risk aversion (Segaro, 2012). The business works to preserve and secure the family, not taking risk-averse decisions but strategic decisions that allow future continuity. In the case of the hotel industry, the more recent literature found that family involvement can facilitate internationalisation, considering the ideas of the stewardship theory (Andreu et al., 2019; Andreu, Claver, Quer, & Rienda, 2018; Rienda, Claver, & Andreu, 2020), emphasising the benefits of aligning family and business goals (Le Breton-Miller & Miller, 2009; Schulze, Lubatkin, & Dino, 2003). The need to continue the business in the future leads the firm to take riskier decisions. One important decision for family hotels is their international commitment. Although a more restrictive approach usually argues that FFs are less internationalised, Spanish family hotels have a high level of international activity (Andreu et  al., 2018). In accordance with the stewardship theory, business activity is seen as a way to support the family in the future, to provide continuity and security for future generations (Chu, 2009; Miller, Breton-­ Miller, & Scholnick, 2008; Miller & Le Breton-Miller, 2006). That is why these enterprises invest in creating the conditions required to ensure long-­ term benefits for all family members (Gómez-Mejía et al., 2007). Seeking to guarantee long-term continuity and survival, FFs will tend to undertake strategies aimed at rapid growth. This may lead them to achieve a larger market share in the current markets or even to expand towards new markets, as is the case with an internationalisation strategy. Zahra (2003) observed how greater family involvement is likely to have a positive influence on the decision to compete internationally. According to the stewardship theory, the objectives of managers join those of owners and seek to attain organisational objectives such as business growth (Davis et al., 1997). The majority of ownership and management in the hands of a family has been studied from the same definition as FF. The most common way to define an FF was through a combination of ownership and management criteria (Kontinen & Ojala, 2010) and the authors found a negative impact (Sciascia, Mazzola, Astrachan, & Pieper, 2012), a positive impact (Andreu et al., 2019; Zahra, 2003) or even an insignificant impact on internationalisation (Arregle et al., 2017). Considering the stewardship theory, positive family interactions can enhance an FF because relationship conflict diminishes and a participative strategy process arises (Eddleston & Kellermanns, 2007). In this line, a greater level of control is an important family-based resource

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that may contribute to FF success. We propose that the hotel industry is highly internationalised due to, among others, the family involvement of each firm. When family ownership and management are high, the level of family involvement is also high, and this has a positive impact on the degree of internationalisation. Therefore we propose that: H1a: Greater family involvement, through family ownership and management of an FF, is positively related with the degree of internationalisation of family hotels. The presence of a family CEO is another important factor in international decisions. A family CEO can facilitate the alignment of interests between ownership and management. A family CEO may also provide better internal control mechanisms and better access to resources (Peng & Jiang, 2010). In some studies, the presence of family CEO increases family involvement (Al-Dubai, Ismail, & Amran, 2014; Baronchelli, Bettinelli, Del Bosco, & Loane, 2016). From the stewardship theory, if the CEO is a member of the family, the CEO should show a long-term orientation towards the firm’s survival, and the level of internationalisation would be positively influenced (Zahra, 2005) since growing across borders helps to strengthen the business in the long run (Pukall & Calabrò, 2014). CEOs in FFs are committed to international expansion decisions to improve the long-term prospects of their businesses (Chen, Liu, Ni, & Wu, 2015; Miller et al., 2008). This leads us to propose the following: H1b: Greater family involvement, due to the presence of a family CEO, is positively related with the degree of internationalisation of family hotels. Generation has also been analysed in previous studies, although many of them consider it as a control variable (Arregle et  al., 2017). Some authors found that generation has no impact on internationalisation (Mitter, Duller, Feldbauer-Durstmüller, & Kraus, 2014), following the same argument as the stewardship theory, a younger generation could also affect internationalisation in a positive way (Arregle et al., 2017; Claver, Rienda, & Quer, 2007; Okoroafo, 1999). The family increases in complexity with successive generations, and firm managers will perceive more risk from the search for market information, customer needs or the firm’s internal relations, increasing market threats and reducing the exploitation of market opportunities (Bobillo, Rodríguez-Sanz, & Tejerina-Gaite, 2013). Over the years, FFs become more conservative and less inclined to take the risks involved in business activities that might undermine the economic value creation process (Zahra, 2005). Later generations managing the company make it difficult to integrate the family’s interests and, according to the stewardship theory, this impedes

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long-­term growth decisions such as internationalisation. This is why we propose Hypothesis H1c as follows: H1c: Greater family involvement, due to the presence of the first or a younger generation, is positively related with the degree of internationalisation of family hotels.

Foreign Entry Modes of FFs The internationalisation of FFs has also been studied from different points of view, such as foreign location choices (Filatochev, Lien, & Piesse, 2005; Hernández, Nieto, & Boellis, 2018) or entry modes used by the firm (Andreu et al., 2019; Claver et al., 2007; Pongelli, Carolli, & Cucculelli, 2016). Foreignmarket entry mode choice represents an important research topic because this may be an irreversible decision and because there are multiple variables that influence this choice (Agarwal & Ramaswami, 1992). One of the most critical strategic decisions for the internationalisation process is the choice of foreign market entry mode (Brouthers & Hennart, 2007). Traditionally, international business research considered entry mode choices from the perspective of control and risk (Anderson & Gatignon, 1986). And due to the characteristics of FFs, the choice between control and risk foreign entry modes is an important decision (Kao & Kuo, 2017), which could determine the potential risks and rewards for firms entering new international markets. A high-control mode can increase profitability and risk, and a low-control mode diminishes the commitment of resources but frequently at the expense of profitability. In the hotel industry there are different classifications of foreign entry modes. If a firm wants to maximise control, it assumes a greater commitment in terms of resources and risk (Brouthers & Hennart, 2007). Conversely, if a firm opts to relinquish control, it can use contractual methods, which are very common in the hotel industry (Dimou, Chen, & Archer, 2003; Kruesi, Kim, & Hemmington, 2017). In this context, FFs traditionally tend to keep control, although, in an international context, it implies a higher risk (Andreu, Quer, & Rienda, 2020). The stewardship theory proposes that managers, acting as stewards, take riskier decisions with the aim of gaining long-term objectives such as business growth. High-control entry modes, although riskier, allow the firm better control of units in other markets. The need for control is a characteristic of FFs and previous studies point out that these firms are very closed and want to keep control in the hands of the family (Claver et al., 2009). In FFs, family owners tend to have distinctive family-related priorities and risk preferences,

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and this may influence decisions on entry mode choices. Therefore, if FFs want to keep control of their subsidiaries, it is assumed that, despite the risk, they opt for high-control foreign entry modes. In the same way, high-control entry modes exclude external partners that may dilute family shares and decision-­making power (Gómez-Mejía et al., 2010). In addition, we found some differences in the influence of each family involvement component. In relation to family ownership and management, FFs traditionally opt for high-control entry modes (Claver et al., 2007). As previously mentioned, the need to control is higher when the presence of family is also higher. In line with the stewardship theory, a higher level of family control facilitates the achievement of organisational objectives (Davis et al., 1997) even if they entail greater risk. Therefore, internationalisation decisions such as high-control entry modes, while oriented towards riskier options, are preferred for FFs (Kao & Kuo, 2017). This leads us to propose the next hypothesis related to the entry mode choice by FFs in the hotel industry: H2a: Greater family involvement, due to family ownership and management, is positively associated with high-control entry mode choices in family hotels. A similar argument could be applied when there is a family member in the firm’s CEO position. A family CEO means greater family involvement in the business and may favour the use of entry modes that keep control in family hands (Andreu et  al., 2019). The stewardship theory advocates growth-­ oriented decisions and an alignment of the objectives of managers and owners. With high-control entry modes—an important goal for FFs—the firm could develop effective ways to achieve internationalisation, preserving the business, increasing legitimacy and improving the profitability of future generations (Andreu et al., 2020). Therefore, we can propose the next relationship: H2b: Greater family involvement, due to the presence of a family CEO, is positively associated with high-control foreign entry mode choice in family hotels. Finally, if we focus on later generations, they bring a new perspective because new ideas are incorporated with each new generation and a gap appears regarding the more conservative ideas of the founder generation (Zahra, 2005). Some studies found that later generations didn’t increase the likelihood of using entry modes that involve a high level of resource commitment (Claver et al., 2009). Following the stewardship theory, a lower achievement of long-term commitment goals and a decrease of the managerial identification with the firm appear with the passing of generations (Miller et al., 2007). The passing of generations may cause a greater misalignment of interests as ownership becomes scattered among different family members.

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Accordingly, Claver et al. (2007) found that first generations perceive less risk when doing business abroad. To the extent that risk aversion increases with successive generations, the use of non-control modes could be positively related to later generations. For the hotel industry this was recently found in the study of Andreu et al. (2019). The authors identified a lower risk aversion of the founders, with a tendency to use high-control entry modes, compared to the second and subsequent generations. With all these arguments we can propose the last hypothesis: H2c: Greater family involvement, due to the presence of the first or a younger generation, is positively associated with non-control foreign entry mode choice in family hotels. Figure 2.1 shows the model proposed with all the hypotheses.

Methodology The sample was collected from the Alimarket Hotel and Catering Yearbook for the year 2016. The database contains financial and commercial data of the most important hotel chains with Spanish-based headquarters (including both national chains and international groups). From a total of 697 hotel chains, we only analysed internationalised chains. That is, hotel chains with at least one hotel abroad. We identified 76 internationalised Spanish hotel chains with 981 hotels abroad, and these chains make up our final sample. Table 2.1 provides a description of the sample.

Ownership & management

H1a (+) H1b (+)

DOI

H1c (+)

Family CEO

H2a (+) H2b (+)

Generation

H2c (+)

FAMILY INVOLVEMENT Fig. 2.1  Family involvement and internationalisation

High-control Entry modes

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Table 2.1  Sample description Variables Family involvement 1. Without 2. Low 3. Medium 4. Higher Family CEO Yes No Generation First Second Third and subsequent DOI (mean)

52.6% 10.5% 21.1% 15.8% 7.9% 92.1% 25.7% 60.0% 14.3% 36.67%

Entry modes High-control Non-control

256 (26.1%) 725 (73.9%)

Dependent Variables Degree of internationalisation (DOI). The ratio of sales abroad over total sales is often used to measure DOI (Grant, Jammine, & Thomas, 1988; Miller et al., 2008). Due to the seasonality of the hotel industry, the most frequently used ratio is the number of rooms abroad over the total number of rooms (Lee, Upneja, Özdemir, & Sun, 2014). This measure has been used in previous studies on internationalisation in the hotel industry (Brida, Ramón-­ Rodriguez, Such-Devesa, & Driha, 2016; Lu & Beamish, 2004; Ramón, 2002; Tallman & Li, 1996). The higher the ratio, the higher the DOI. In this study we used this measure to find the intensity of internationalisation. Entry mode. We considered entry mode as a dummy variable as follows: (0) non-control entry modes (such as franchising agreements), and (1) high-­ control entry modes (such as management contracts, lease agreements and equity-based entry modes). In the hotel industry there are different classifications of foreign entry modes. Both franchising and management agreements are contractual methods, but management agreements offer more operational and strategic control, thus being closer to a quasi-internalised transaction (Contractor & Kundu, 1998; Plá-Barber, Sánchez-Peinado, & Madhok, 2010). However, despite not entailing large investments, management contracts involve a certain level of resource commitment. This is due to the need to transfer assets—such as knowledge for local management training or the

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expatriation of staff from one country to another—as well as the need to acquire local information and the pre-opening costs (Dimou et al., 2003). In turn, a franchising agreement not only means lesser resource commitment but also a lower level of control, thus making it a quasi-market transaction (Kruesi et al., 2017). Therefore, management agreements, lease contracts (which can almost be considered an equity-based entry mode) and the ownership of hotels abroad are entry modes which, in addition to involving greater resource commitment, allow the firm to exercise more control (Dimou et al., 2003; Kruesi et al., 2017).

Independent Variables Family ownership and management. One definition of family business considers that the majority of ownership and management of the firm should be in family hands (Claver et al., 2009; Graves & Thomas, 2004). Nevertheless, the FF and non-FF classification could be more detailed when we include different situations that show the heterogeneity of FFs. Following Andreu et  al. (2019) and Arregle et al. (2017), we established four categories that combine different degrees of ownership and management: (1) Firms with less than 10% of the corporate capital in the hands of the family and fewer than two family managers. These are classified as “firms without family involvement” (Gómez-Mejía et al., 2010). (2) Firms with more than 10% of the firm’s capital in the hands of the family and more than two managers in management positions but whose percentage is still a minority in both ownership and management (firms with low family involvement). (3) Firms with a majority presence of family members in management positions but not in ownership (family-managed firms) or firms with a majority percentage of family presence in ownership but not in management positions (family-owned firms). (4) Firms with a majority family presence in both ownership and management positions (family-owned and family-managed firms). In this last situation the firm has a “greater family involvement”. Family CEO. The presence of the family in management, more precisely in the CEO position, has been widely studied (García-Castro & Aguilera, 2014). Family involvement increases when a managerial position is occupied by a family member. The influence exerted by owners who hold top management positions, such as CEO, allows them to enjoy the discretion of acting with the possibility to influence corporate decisions (Miller & Le Breton-Miller, 2006). Hence, we included a dummy variable that takes the value of 1, when one of the family members is the firm’s CEO, and 0, otherwise.

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Generation. Some previous studies analysed the influence of generation on FF internationalisation. Some studied its impact on international commitment (Claver et al., 2009; Fernández & Nieto, 2005) and others its impact on certain decisions such as foreign entry mode (Andreu et  al., 2019; Claver, Rienda, & Quer, 2008). In our case, the current generation was collected through different databases and consulting the corporate websites of each hotel chain. We checked the information obtained in secondary databases by contacting each hotel chain. Finally, in order to collect and differentiate between higher and lower family involvement, with respect to the generation that is currently in charge of the company, we created a dummy variable. As Sharma (2004) points out, founders could exert considerable influence on the culture and values of the company. Therefore, we created a variable which adopts the value 1 when the founder (first generation) manages the firm, and 0 when it is the second or subsequent generations that have joined the company. This variable is also used in the paper of Ramón-Llorens, García-Meca, and Duréndez (2017).

Control Variables Firm size. Firms may adopt different patterns of internationalisation based on their financial and managerial resource limitations (Brida, Driha, Ramón-­ Rodríguez, & Scuderi, 2015). Hence, we controlled for firm size using the average income of each hotel chain in the last three years, with a logarithmic transformation to normalise the variable distribution (Brida et  al., 2016; García de Soto & Vargas, 2015). International experience. International experience is also a determinant factor for international firms (Gatignon & Anderson, 1988). International experience allows the company to better adapt to the characteristics of the host market (Niñerola, Campa, Hernández, & Sánchez, 2016). Companies with no international experience are likely to have more difficulties in managing foreign operations, thus preferring entry modes demanding lower resource commitment (Agarwal & Ramaswami, 1992). We measured international experience with the total number of years the company has operated abroad (Brida et al., 2016; León-Darder, Villar-García, & Plá-Barber, 2011). Cultural distance. Cultural distance is a very important factor that influences decisions on entry modes in international markets (Demirbag, Tatoglu, & Glaister, 2008). In different cultures, executives perceive high uncertainty, and transaction costs could be reduced when home and host countries share cultural values. We measured the cultural distance between Spain and each

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host country following the Kogut and Singh (1988) index, based on the extended Hofstede’s model with six dimensions: power distance, uncertainty avoidance, individualism vs collectivism, masculinity vs femininity, long-term vs short-term orientation, and indulgence vs restraint. Countries with values close to 0 for cultural distance are culturally similar to Spain. This index has been widely used in previous international business research (Barkema & Vermeulen, 1998; Demirbag et  al., 2008) and FF studies (Strike, Berrone, Sapp, & Congiu, 2015). Hotel category. The category of hotels abroad was determined by means of a categorical variable according to the number of stars that each hotel has (between 1 and 5). This variable has been used in several studies to assess the importance of a hotel’s intangible assets, understanding that the higher the level of importance, the more control the firm will want to exert over it, which in turn can influence foreign entry mode (León-Darder et  al., 2011; Plá-­ Barber, León-Darder, & Villar, 2011).

Results A correlation analysis is presented in Table 2.2, together with the mean and standard deviation of each variable of our model. We also calculated the variance inflation factor (VIF) in order to detect multicollinearity problems. The VIF values are from 1.05 to 3.39. The highest value is below 10, the cut-off point recommended by Kutner, Nachtsheim, Neter, and Li (2005). Therefore, we have ruled out the presence of multicollinearity in our data. Finally, Table 2.3 presents the regressions used to test the hypotheses: a linear regression with Models 1 and 2 (Hypotheses 1a, 1b and 1c) and a binomial regression with Models 3 and 4 (Hypotheses 2a, 2b and 2c). Moreover, in order to have a better interpretation of our results, in Table 2.3-Model 4 we included the odd ratios to calculate the effect sizes of each variable in terms of entry mode decisions. In Model 2, with respect to Hypothesis 1a, the results show a positive and significant relationship between family ownership/management and internationalisation (9.49, p